Friday, 30 May 2025

Reading Roundup for May 2025

 


And here we are at the end of another month...


The Thief of Farrowfell by Ravena Guron

This book will be a delight to middle grade readers who enjoy fantasy.  If you would like to read my review you can find it here.


More Than Murder by Jayne Chard

This is a fun and entertaining cosy crime book from a debut author.

If you would like to read my review you can find it here.


The Testament of Mary by Colm Toibin

A moving account from Mary as she watches her son be crucified.


Troubled Times for Tilly by Kay Seeley

Troubled Times for Tilly is set in Victorian London and is an enjoyable read.

If you would like to read my review you can find it here.


Be Mine by Lizzy Barber

This is a powerful and compelling novel that I couldn't put down. It was my favourite read this month.

If you would like to read my review you can find it here.


Not Moving Out by Jon Rance

I enjoyed reading this rom com very much and it has a lot to offer.

If you would like to read my review you can find it here.


Agatha Christie by Lucy Worsley


As you would expect from the author and historian, Lucy Worsley this book has been expertly researched and written.

If you would like to read my review you can find it here.

The House at River's Edge by Rachel Burton


 love a dual time line narrative when it is well done, as it definitely has been in this book.

If you would like to read my review you can find it here.


Remember by Patricia Shanae Smith


 I rarely give books a five star review but this one was well deserving.

If you would like to read my review you can find it here.

They Thought I Was Dead: Sandy's Story by Peter James

I was rather disappointed by this book.


Libby and the Parisian Puzzle by Jo Clarke

I enjoyed this book very much. It is aimed at middle grade readers and it's my granddaughter's favourite.


The Woman Who Met Herself by Laura Pearson


This is a gorgeous book, simultaneously full of heartbreak and joy. 

If you would like to read my review you can find it here.


Books I am Partway Through

Rainbows and Lollipops by Mo Fanning

The Last Train to Freedom by Deborah Swift

Great and Horrible News by Blessin Adams

The Rabbi's Suitcase by Robert Kehlmann

Thursday, 29 May 2025

Boy with Wings by Mark Mustian - #bookspotlight #blogtour


Today I am shining the spotlight on this marvellous looking book.  Boy with Wings by Mark Mustian is the Next Generation Indie Book Awards 2025 First Place Winner.

The Blurb

What does it mean to be different? 

When Johnny Cruel is born with strange appendages on his back in the 1930s South, the locals think he's a devil. Determined to protect him, his mother fakes his death, and they flee. Thus begins Johnny's years long struggle to find a place he belongs. 

From a turpentine camp of former slaves to a freak show run by a dwarf who calls herself Tiny Tot and on to the Florida capitol building, Johnny finds himself working alongside other outcasts, struggling to answer the question of his existence. Is he a horror, a wonder, or an angel? Should he hide himself to live his life? 

Following Johnny's journey through love, betrayal, heartbreak, and several murders, Boy With Wings is a story of the sacrifices and freedom inherent in making one's own special way - and of love and the miracles that give our lives meaning.


Book Details

ISBN:  979 8888244296

Publisher:  Koehler Books

Formats:  e-book, hardback and paperback

No. of Pages:  322


Purchase Links

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author


Mark Mustian is the author of the novels The Return and The Gendarme, the latter a finalist for the Dayton International Literary Peace Prize and shortlisted for the Saroyan International Award for Writing. It won the Florida Gold Book Award for Fiction and has been published in ten languages. 

The founder of the Word of South Festival of Literature and Music in Tallahassee, Florida, his new novel, Boy With Wings, is out in 2025.

You can also find Mark at:

Author Website

X

Bluesky




(media courtesy of The Coffee Pot Book Club)

(all opinions are my own)


Wednesday, 28 May 2025

The Woman Who Met Herself by Laura Pearson - #bookreview #blogtour

 


Ruth Waverley us sixty-two when it happens. She lives with her husband Nigel in a spacious house on the edge of Loughborough, and she has twin sons who have grown up and moved out... She has a small business, making cakes for birthdays and weddings in her large, light-filled kitchen. You might think she has it easy. But you'd be wrong...

***

The Blurb

What would you do, if you met your double?

Debbie Jones thinks life is an adventure. Even having lost her husband a year ago, she’s ready for whatever the world might throw her way. Being in her sixties doesn’t mean it’s all over for her yet, and she loves her new job doing neighbourhood support for a charity. Then she knocks on a stranger’s front door.

Ruth Waverley doesn’t like surprises. Her life isn’t perhaps all she once dreamed off, but what other options are there for a woman in her sixties? She’s proud of her home and children. And she likes her life well enough. Then she hears someone knocking at the door.

As the door opens, both Ruth and Debbie get the shock of their lives. As their eyes meet – the recognition is instant. Not because they’ve met before. But because they have the same face. They’re completely identical.

And everything is about to change, for both women. In ways they couldn’t possibly imagine…


My Review

I have previously read a couple of books by this author.  The Beforelife of Eliza Valentine and The Last List of Mabel Beaumont, both of which I enjoyed immensely.  So, when I was offered the opportunity to read this book as part of the blog tour, I snapped up the chance.

This is a gorgeous book, simultaneously full of heartbreak and joy. Every time I had to put the book aside, I kept thinking about the two main characters in the book, Ruth and Debbie.

Imagine coming face to face with someone who was your exact double. How do you think you might react? I asked myself this question at several points during my reading of this book. Unsurprisingly, I found the question impossible to answer.

Both Ruth and Debbie were fabulous main characters and Laura Pearson has done a brilliant job in bringing them to life on the page. In fact, by the time I finished the book I felt as though I knew them well enough that I could have knocked on the door and had a coffee and a chat with them.

It is no spoiler when I say that it quickly becomes evident that they are identical twins who were separated at an early point in their lives. Their lives have taken very different paths and observing how their relationship develops made for wonderful reading.

The author tells her story with skill. The result is this wonderfully uplifting and heartwarming story which was a joy to read.

Having now read three of Ms. Pearson's novels she has cemented herself as one of my favourite authors, and I fully intend to read more of her books.  I highly recommend this one and hope that you enjoy it as much as I did.


Book Details  

ISBN:  978 1836034650

Publisher:  Boldwood Books

Formats:  e-book, audio, hardback and paperback (currently available on Kindle Unlimited)

No. of Pages:  304 (paperback)


Purchase Links

Amazon UK

Amazon US

Blackwell's


About the Author

Laura Pearson is the author of the #1 bestseller The Last List of Mabel Beaumont. She founded The Bookload on Facebook and has had several pieces published in the Guardian and the Telegraph.



(ARC and media courtesy of Rachel's Random Resources)

(all opinions are my own)

Tuesday, 27 May 2025

Nothing Proved by Janet Wertman - #excerpt #extract #blogtour


I am so pleased to be part of the blog tour for this book, and to be sharing an extract. Nothing Proved is the first in the Regina series and looks well worth delving into.


The Blurb

Danger lined her path, but destiny led her to glory… 

Elizabeth Tudor learned resilience young. Declared illegitimate after the execution of her mother Anne Boleyn, she bore her precarious position with unshakable grace. But upon the death of her father, King Henry VIII, the vulnerable fourteen-year-old must learn to navigate a world of shifting loyalties, power plays, and betrayal. 

After narrowly escaping entanglement in Thomas Seymour’s treason, Elizabeth rebuilds her reputation as the perfect Protestant princess – which puts her in mortal danger when her half-sister Mary becomes Queen and imposes Catholicism on a reluctant land. Elizabeth escapes execution, clawing her way from a Tower cell to exoneration. But even a semblance of favor comes with attempts to exclude her from the throne or steal her rights to it through a forced marriage.  

Elizabeth must outwit her enemies time and again to prove herself worthy of power. The making of one of history’s most iconic monarchs is a gripping tale of survival, fortune, and triumph.


The Extract

May 24, 1553

The minister raised his arms for the concluding prayers. “Take us and use us to love and serve you, and all people, in the power of Your Spirit and in the name of Your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.”

Elizabeth barely remembered the shock she had experienced when she first returned to worship at St. Ethelreda’s after Edward’s reforms stripped the nave of decoration. She was now accustomed to the whitewashed walls, though she did still miss the music.

With the service ended, she stood with her ladies to leave, smiling to the other congregants and exchanging wishes of peace as she did every week, conscious of the example she set.

Just outside the church, a burly, somewhat familiar, fellow came to address her. His canvas doublet was not expensive enough to make him a merchant, but he might be a craftsman or journeyman. His reluctant posture suggested he had been prodded to approach her. “Might you attend the archery competition, Your Grace? We are shooting against the village of Stanborough, up the road.” His voice held a nervous tremor. “We will set a special place for you.”

“How kind,” Elizabeth said. “But are these the champions who bested us last year?”

"We have all been practicing for months,” the man said. “Much as a Sunday afternoon begs for a well-earned nap, we have used our days of rest to work hard.” A sudden wide smile revealed a lacking front tooth, and she recognized the glover’s assistant. “At least until the pub opens.”

Elizabeth infused warmth into her voice, to show she was teasing. “What? On the Lord’s Day?”

“When you have only one day to yourself, you have to make the most of it,” he said. “And the extra pastimes help me praise God all the more for His grace.”

Elizabeth smiled at his good nature. “Your name is Harry, as I recall?” She had a fantastic memory for faces and used it whenever possible for the effect it had on people.

Sure enough, his chest puffed with pride. “Yes, Your Grace. Harry, after your father.” He grabbed the woman just behind him and pulled her forward. “And this is my wife Lissa, after your grandmother.”

Despite the woman’s grey hair, her nimble step suggested she was not much past twenty, like Harry.

“We have that in common,” Elizabeth said.

Lissa curtsied low. “Thank you, Your Grace, and may I say it is good to see you recovered. We were worried about you.”

“Worried?”

“When you did not attend the weddings. We feared you were ill.”

Elizabeth felt her eyes narrow. “Weddings?”

“Three of them at the Duke of Northumberland’s estate. His son to Jane Grey, his daughter to the son of the Earl of Huntingdon. And Katherine Grey to the son of the Earl of Pembroke.”

A huge celebration from which Elizabeth had been excluded. Powerful alliances cemented in the face of the King’s purported relapse. Her mind turned over the facts like a locksmith picking at a tumbler. “Ah, yes,” Elizabeth lied. “I was sorry to miss them. But how do you know about them?”

“One of the sellers on market day had just come from London, from the market near Durham House, with no asparagus left because it was all taken for the feast. The Duchess was so grateful for his spears that she let him onto the grounds to watch. Lots of others too. She must not have planned well.”

“That must have been quite exciting.” Elizabeth kept her voice light. “Was he close enough to see the bride and groom? Or, rather, brides and grooms.”

“He saw them all arrive, and said it was as many dukes and duchesses and earls and countesses as Christmas at court. Even Ambassadors – they say the French one came with a horse as a gift. No one was missing but the King.” She broke off and curtsied, embarrassed. “And of course you, Your Grace. And the Lady Mary. I pray she is healthy as well.”

All the highest people, even ambassadors. A rushed state occasion without the King or the next heirs. Why had Northumberland not waited? And why had he snubbed her after courting her friendship so diligently? Most important, how sick was Edward that he did not attend?

As always when fearful things happened, Elizabeth felt ill. She added one or two questions, silly ones about jousts and dances, as if that was all that mattered. “When does the archery tournament begin?” she asked.

“In about an hour, once Stanborough has arrived.”

“Alas, I cannot tarry. But I will pray for your victory now and plan to attend next year,” she said, taking off for home as soon as she could. Walking calmed her and she needed calming right now.

As soon as Elizabeth and her entourage were far enough away not to be overheard, bedlam 

broke out. “What the devil is Northumberland doing?” Catherine asked.

“He’s up to no good, marrying a son into the line of succession,” Blanche said.

Elizabeth snorted. “And two more matches besides.”

Only Parliament could change the succession, and they had not been called. This was likely Northumberland seeking to protect himself in case Edward worsened. But why exclude Elizabeth? Something felt off.


Book Details

ISBN:  978 1735491189

Publisher:  Janet Wertman

Formats:  e-books, hardback and paperback

No. of Pages:  376


Purchase Links

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

By day, Janet Wertman is a freelance grantwriter for impactful nonprofits. By night, she writes critically acclaimed, character-driven historical fiction – indulging a passion for the Tudor era she had harbored since she was eight years old and her parents let her stay up late to watch The Six Wives of Henry VIII and Elizabeth R. 

Her Seymour Saga trilogy (Jane the Quene, The Path to Somerset, The Boy King) took her deep into one of the era’s central families – and now her follow-up Regina series explores Elizabeth’s journey from bastard to icon.

Janet also runs a blog (www.janetwertman.com) where she posts interesting takes on the Tudors and what it’s like to write about them.

You can also find Janet at:

Instagram

Bluesky

Pinterest



(media courtesy of The Coffee Pot Book Club)

(all opinions are my own)

Friday, 23 May 2025

Tangled in Water by Pam Records - #excerpt #extract #blogtour

 


I am delighted to be posting and extract from this book today. Tangled in Water is a standalone novel with a dual narrative.


The Blurb

1932. Natalia is 16 and a bootlegger's daughter, playing the mermaid mascot on a rundown paddlewheel used to entertain brewers and distributors. 

A sequined costume hides her scarred and misshaped legs, but it can't cover up the painful memories and suspicions that haunt her. An eccentric healer who treats patients with Old Country tonics, tries to patch wounds, but only adds to the heartache. A fierce storm threatens to destroy everything, including a stash of stolen jewels. 

1941. Prohibition is over, but the same henchmen still run the show. Nattie's new mermaid act is more revealing, with more at risk. When the dry-docked paddlewheel is bought by the US Navy for training exercises, the pressure escalates further. 

Can Nattie entice a cocky US Navy officer to help her gain access to the ship for one last chance to confront her past, settle scores, and retrieve the hidden loot? Is there a new course ahead?


The Extract

“Safe from what, sir?”

“Trouble. Don’t you feel it in the air, Jenkins? Electricity, static-charged. Something’s coming our way.” 

“Um, sir, once again, I would like to suggest that is the pressure change from a storm front heading to us,” interrupted Wiggins. “A thunderstorm with serious, sustained wind speeds has been reported—”

“Wiggins, shut up. I don’t want to hear more about this phantom storm you’ve imagined.”

“But—”

“Just shut up, Wiggins. I’ll take the wheel.”

Cappie stepped up to the helm and gripped the large wheel tightly, squeezing power from the metal. It felt good in his hands.

He focused his eyes on the lake. The water was a dark, muddy green, the muck along the lake floor stirred up, the runoff from the canals and city streets making the water dank, smelling like oil and chemicals, stockyard waste and untreated sewage. He tried to focus on the horizon, where the gray flannel sky reached down and anointed the water, a priest giving a dying child a blessing before it passed from this world to the next. The miracle spot of sky touching water was elusive, but he sailed toward it, certain he could reach it before darkness fell if he could only keep his thoughts pure and focused. 

But Queenie had other intentions. She poked his ribs. She grinned. She twirled her long auburn hair around her hand, making loops and circles that were hypnotic. She might strangle him with the knotted ropes of hair or hang him from the hatchway. He could see her as clearly as if she were there. And he hated her as much as he had the day she died. Her perfume hung in the air, making a bubble of Queenie air and Queenie needle-nags around him and the ship’s wheel. 

She was sucking the air out of him. 

“Wiggins, take the wheel.”

Captain rushed to his quarters to collect himself. It was a small but handsome room with a bunk and desk, some shelves, and a cabinet of charts. There was a safe in the floor behind his desk. The key to it, which he kept in his pocket, had recently gone missing. Thank God he had a spare. After the door was opened with a key, there was another door, with a combination. No one knew it but him. He wasn’t a trusting man. 

She’d never get the combination. He’d take it to his grave.

Queenie laughed little teehees and heeheesquawks that could have been seagull cries, birds flying over the ship. He knew better. He’d recognize her jeering anywhere.  


Book Details

ISBN:  978 1962465915

Publisher:  Historium Press

Formats:  e-book, hardback and paperback

No. of Pages:  418 (paperback)


Purchase Links

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

Pam and her husband, Mark, recently uprooted from the Midwest to move to Savannah, Georgia, the perfect place for enjoying the beach, historic architecture and Spanish moss. 

She's recently retired from writing content for software companies and now focuses on writing fiction, camping, and exploring historic cities.

Pam is the author of three historic novels. 

You can also find Pam at:

Author Website

Linked In

Instagram



(media courtesy of The Coffee Pot Book Club)

(all opinions are my own)

Thursday, 22 May 2025

Agatha Christie by Lucy Worsley - #bookreview


Agatha Miller grew up in a special place. Her childhood home stood on a hill above the seaside resort of Torquay in the south of Devon...

***

The Blurb

Why did Agatha Christie spend her career pretending that she was 'just' an ordinary housewife, when clearly she wasn't? As Lucy Worsley says, 'She was thrillingly, scintillatingly modern'. She went surfing in Hawaii, she loved fast cars, and she was intrigued by the new science of psychology, which helped her through devastating mental illness.

So why - despite all the evidence to the contrary - did Agatha present herself as a retiring Edwardian lady of leisure?

She was born in 1890 into a world which had its own rules about what women could and couldn't do. Lucy Worsley's biography is not just of an internationally renowned bestselling writer. It's also the story of a person who, despite the obstacles of class and gender, became an astonishingly successful working woman.

With access to personal letters and papers that have rarely been seen, Lucy Worsley's biography is both authoritative and entertaining and makes us realise what an extraordinary pioneer Agatha Christie was - truly a woman who wrote the twentieth century.


My Review

 When I was in my late teens and early twenties I devoured books by Agatha Christie. For no reason in particular, I haven't returned to them since, but this book has reawakened my enjoyment of her books and has given me a very unsubtle nudge (aka a poke in the ribs) to start reading them again. So, I have ordered one of her later novels which I have never read before.

As you would expect from the author and historian, Lucy Worsley this book has been expertly researched and written. It is a compelling account of Agatha Christie, and I was gripped from start to finish. I already knew a bit about her as I had previously watched Ms. Worsley's three part television series based on the book. Reading this fills in all of the details and unanswered questions that had to be omitted from the programme.

In fact, the level of detail contained in the book was masterful. I enjoyed reading about how she acquired some of the knowledge she needed for her books. For example, during the war she volunteered in a hospital pharmacy and thus obtained lots of information about poisons that appear in many of her books as a murder weapon.

I actually read this book with my Book Group. As you would expect, some liked it more than others but nevertheless, I think this is probably our highest scoring book for the year. The vast majority of members loved it and for those who didn't... well, you can't please them all and this is no reflection on the quality of the research, writing and information contained in this book.

The overriding thing I have taken away from this book is what an incredible woman Agatha Christie was; particularly in what she achieved as a woman during the period in which she did. The superb writing is accompanied by wonderful photographs and the author has included an extensive list of sources that she used during her research.

She hasn't shied away in discussing the overt racism and anti-Semitism which appear in Mrs Christie's books. Instead, she presents them as they were viewed during the time in which they were written, as well as how we perceive them in the modern day.

For me this was an excellent book to read. It is definitely one of the better nonfiction titles I have read in a while, and I can't recommend it highly enough. 


Book Details

ISBN:  978 1529303919

Publisher:  Hodder and Stoughton

Formats:  e-book, audio, hardback and paperback

No. of Pages:  432 (paperback)


Purchase Links

Bookshop.org

Amazon UK

Blackwell's


About the Author

Lucy was born in Reading, studied Ancient and Modern History at New College, Oxford, and I got a PhD in art history from the University of Sussex.

Her first job after leaving college was at a crazy but wonderful historic house called Milton Manor in Oxfordshire. Here she would give guided tours, occasionally feed the llamas, and look for important pieces of paper that her boss Anthony had lost. Soon after that she moved to the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings, in the lovely job for administrator of the Wind and Watermills Section. Here she helped to organise that celebrated media extravaganza, National Mills Day. 

She departed for English Heritage in 1997, first as an Assistant Inspector and then as an Inspector of Ancient Monuments and Historic Buildings; Bolsover Castle, Hardwick Old Hall, and Kirby Hall were her favourite properties there. In 2002 she made a brief excursion to Glasgow Museums before coming down to London as Chief Curator of Historic Royal Palaces in 2003. 

You can also find Lucy at:

Author Website

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Instagram

Facebook


(all opinions are my own)

(author media courtesy of Goodreads)

(bookshop.org affiliated)

Wednesday, 21 May 2025

Not Moving Out by Jon Rance - #bookreview #blogtour

 


Freya and I agreed to meet at Pelicano Coffee Co in The Lanes, which we had been to before during happier times and it was one of our favourites...

***

The Blurb

Spouses Without Benefits - how can you move on without moving out?

Freya and Joe’s marriage has fizzled its way to the end, but for financial reasons, and to support their daughter in her final year of school, they decide they need to keep living together for six months.

They know it won’t be easy, but for Joe at least, it provides creative rewards: a struggling sitcom writer, he has found his new project. Why not write about his own situation? And the network loves it.

There is just one problem - Freya doesn’t know.

Can Freya and Joe navigate the six months together and might they find out something new about their relationship?


My Review

I enjoyed reading this rom com very much and it has a lot to offer.

The chapters are told from the points of view of the two main characters, Joe and Freya. They live with their teenage daughter Dolly who is heading off to university in the next six months. Joe and Freya's marriage has come to an end, but they agree to live in the family home until Dolly leaves.

From Joe's chapters of the book, we can ascertain that he still loves Freya. As a writer of sitcoms, he hasn't had much work of late and so decides to write a sitcom based around their situation. He knows that he must tell Freya and hopefully, receive her approval but he just never seems to find the right time to tell her.

This situation perfectly sums up why their marriage has fizzled out. Although Joe's job as a writer is in itself an ability to communicate ideas and feelings to others, when it comes to doing so with Freya he never seems able to do it. He has been unable to communicate with her about so much and keeps his feelings to himself. He is a jovial character, preferring to consistently see the positive side of life, even when it is sometimes inappropriate.

Although it is Freya who has instigated the separation, I got the distinct impression that deep down she still loved Joe. However, her frustrations with him override her feelings. The whole book has a will they/won't they vibe and I found myself rooting for them throughout.

They were both good characters who were fun to read about. I thought the author did a great job with portraying them and their attitudes and feelings. The secondary characters were equally well written. 

I thought this was brilliantly written, and the author captured the atmosphere in the house skillfully. Conversations with friends and family about the situation were excellently done and stopped the book becoming too insular.

This book both saddened and amused me at times. It was extremely funny in parts which balanced perfectly with the less happy points in the novel.

It is an extremely well put together novel and I highly recommend it.


Book Details:

ISBN:  978 1804368589

Publisher:  Hera Books

Formats:  e-book and paperback

No. of Pages:  352 (paperback)


Purchase Links





About the Author


JON RANCE writes novels about love, family, relationships, and all the messy bits in between. His novels have been described as hilarious, romantic, and perfect for fans of Mike Gayle and Beth O’Leary.

 His first two books, This Thirtysomething Life and Happy Endings, were published by Hodder and Stoughton. Since then, he has written numerous novels including, Sunday Dinners, Dan And Nat Got Married, and The Worst Man. Jon signed a two-book deal with Hera in 2024 and the first novel, One Hundred Moments Of Us, was published in August 2024. The second book, Not Moving Out, a second chance rom com, will be published in May 2025.

Jon grew up in England and studied English Literature at Middlesex University, London, before travelling the world and meeting his American wife in Australia. He now lives in California with his wife, two kids, and a dog called Pickle, where he writes full-time and drinks far too much tea.

You can also find Jon at:












(ARC and media courtesy of Rachel's Random Resources)
(all opinions are my own)


Tuesday, 20 May 2025

Be Mine by Lizzy Barber - #bookreview #blogtour

 


A shriek rips through the blackness.

I struggle to process it in the muddy depths of sleep. It is familiarly unfamiliar; a continuous, rasping cry, insisting itself on me even as I beg it to retreat.

But when my brain starts to clear and I recognise it... The sound is coming from me...

***

The Blurb

Once, Beth was a different person, convinced she was living her dream life with the enigmatic wellness group, Elixir. But when that dream became a nightmare, she had no choice but to run, no matter what – or who – stood in her way.

Ten years later, exhausted and struggling with the pressures of motherhood, she receives a mysterious letter bearing only the infinity symbol, and knows immediately it is from them.

The past she’d run from has finally caught up with her, and the secrets she’s tried so hard to hide will soon be uncovered. Can she finally escape them for good, or will her freedom pay the ultimate price?

If wellness is the new religion, what happens when it’s taken too far?


My Review

This is a powerful and compelling novel that I couldn't put down. I went to bed one night with the intention of reading a chapter or two before I put the light out and found there was no way I was going to stop reading until I had finished it. In fact, my poor husband who has to be up extremely early for work was complaining about the light being on so late. So, what's a woman to do? Well, I gave him my sleep mask and continued reading until I'd finished it!

The book follows Beth who has escaped a cult which is dressed up as a wellness organisation called Elixir and is headed up by the charismatic Tate.  Following her escape, she has gone on to marry Adam and have a child but ten years on and the cult have tracked her down. The book is set during 2023 but with an equal number of chapters dedicated to the time when Beth becomes involved with Elixir.

As a reader we can anticipate the danger that she is getting into as she succumbs to the attraction of the organisation. I literally found myself wanting to shout at her and intervene to stop her doing this. The control that she was succumbing to was unnerving to read, all the while she herself believes these are her decisions and are for her own good.

I found myself questioning how reliable a narrator the Beth of 2023 was. She has spent the last decade looking over her shoulder, thinking the Elixir organisation will catch up with her. When she thinks they are, having initially received a letter with their symbol attached, I was wondering if she was simply paranoid.

I enjoyed the dual timeline of this book, and it moved back and forth seamlessly. The author's writing is wonderful and her ability to build tension was outstanding. Little by little we observe the life Beth has built for herself unravelling and the author portrays this skillfully.

There is a twist at the end of this story which I did not see coming until it was upon me but I shall say no more on that subject. However, I would highly encourage you to get your hands on a copy of this book to read it for yourself.

I have never read anything by this author previously but am now fully intent on reading all of her books and have already ordered a copy of My Name is Anna

Book Details

ISBN:  978 1915523518

Publisher:  Datura Books

Formats:  e-book, audio and paperback

No. of Pages:  400 (paperback)


Purchase Links







About the Author:


Lizzy Barber's first novel My Name is Anna was a Daily Mail First novel winner, whilst her follow up Out of her Depth was a Richard & Judy pick and has been optioned by Eleventh Hour Films. She read English at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. She has worked in acting and film development, and has spent the last thirteen years working in the restaurant business with her brother Jamie, heading up their brand and marketing department. They have a small group of restaurants in London: Haché, Hush and Cabana.

You can find out about Lizzy's other novels My Name is Anna and Out of Her Depth by clicking on the titles.

You can also find Lizzy at:







Why not check out some of the other fabulous bloggers on this tour.





(ARC and media courtesy of the publisher)
(all opinions are my own)

Monday, 19 May 2025

This Ruined Place by Michael Lawrence - #extract #excerpt #blogblitz

 


I am very excited to be posting an extract from this book today, This Ruined Place by Michael Lawrence.


The Blurb

Evy Miller thinks a summer with her grandparents in sleepy Dorset will be painfully dull. Her suspicions are confirmed when Juby, a wild-haired, lanky old man, strolls through her grandparents' doorway. At first, she thinks he’s nothing more than an odd duck who charms her grandmother and annoys her grandfather. The last thing she expects is to become his companion on visits to the small village of Rouklye, whose entire population was evicted during WWII. She has no idea that the reason for Juby’s visits will become a defining moment in her life and change her understanding of history and her own family forever.


The Extract

In this extract, Midge, is visiting the ruins of Rouklye with her grandparent’s friend, Juby, for the first time.

Following Juby into the building he’d said was once the village school, she stood in a narrow vestibule with coat pegs on either side. Each peg had a small card by it with the name of a pupil who’d once attended the school. Her eye was caught by one of the names: Violent Croke. She gaped – Violent Croke?! – but closer inspection revealed that there was no ‘n’. 

She read the rest of the names without adding letters: Dorothy Ferris, Walter Richards, Kathleen Richards, Henry Braine, Vera Bellman, Tommy Ochart, Elizabeth Fannon, John Miller, Lizzie Naylor, Fred Day, a number of others. Above the pegs on one wall hung a framed photograph, cracked and brown with age, showing the children, aged from about four to fourteen, to whom the pegs belonged during their years in attendance at the school. A youngish schoolmistress, unsmiling, stood to one side of them, hands folded in front of her. Midge counted twenty-two pegs and twenty-two names, but thirty-one children in the picture, which suggested that there were either more pegs originally or that eight of the kids in the photo did without or doubled up. In the middle of the front row young Billy Brooker, who looked as if he’d been told to sit up straight and didn’t want to, held a small writing slate on which the teacher had chalked ‘Rouklye School 1912’. A typed note beside the photo stated that this same Billy Brooker was later drowned, aged fifteen, in a boating accident in Crowbarrow Bay.

The school itself was a single, heavily-beamed, chapel-like room. A pair of oil lamps dangled on long chains from the whitewashed ceiling. There was a brick fireplace with an old wood stove, and a series of linked desks with fixed benches. Samples of the work of former pupils were laid out on the desks, under glass like museum exhibits. 

‘Any of this yours?’ Midge asked Juby, who was looking at other things in another parts of the room. 

‘Long before my day,’ he said. ‘Didn’t go to school here anyway.’

A large blackboard stood on an easel to one side of the fireplace. The board’s main headings were painted on. The rest, changed daily this month if no other, were neatly hand-written in chalk.

Welcome to Rouklye School

15th August

Weather Outlook

Sunny, hot, cooling sea breeze

Max  29c

Juby stepped up onto a slightly-raised platform at the far end of the room, squeezed himself onto the bench fixed to one side of a large desk that stood there, and stuck his chin on a fist to gaze out of the broad end window. He’s an odd one, Midge thought. The way he looks, speaks, behaves. Even his name was odd. ‘Juby Bench’ was certainly on a par with ‘Violet Croke’ without the ‘n’.

A small giggle behind her. She turned to see who’d come in. No one had. For the second time in less than twenty minutes her spine tingled, but when she saw a young family passing beyond the window she decided that one of the children must have briefly looked in. 

To pass the time until Juby deigned to head on out, she strolled along the desks examining the work under glass. There were crayon and pencil drawings, childish poems about nature, weather, home life. There were also sums, spelling tests, things about religion, and ‘lines’. The work didn’t seem all that old-fashioned, and she found it hard to imagine that the kids who’d produced it would be very old now – those who were still about at all. Most would be long dead, like Billy Brooker. It wasn’t so easy to be amused by their school work, or their names, when you remembered that. 

Nearing the fireplace, she extended her fingers to the unlit fire, imagining the warmth of a good blaze on a freezing winter’s day, then moved along to the piano, an old upright. Tempted to sit down and plink-plank-plunk a bit, a glance at Juby, preoccupied by the window, dissuaded her. Instead, she went to a display case that offered a selection of hand-written entries from the school register, which seemed to have doubled as a diary.

July 13th, 1911   Not so good an attendance this week. Children are kept away while mothers carry food to the hayfield. 

May 24th, 1912   Ernest Mawer has been away all week with a swollen face. Irene Day has been away since Wednesday owing to sickness.

Aug. 2nd, 1912   Irene Day leaves today being 14 years of age next week. I am rather sorry to lose my older children.

Oct. 26th, 1913  Attendance again lowered by the absence of Tommy Ochart who has not been to school since the holiday owing to having no boots.

‘Show you my house if you like.’

She glanced toward the platform at the end of the room. Juby’s hulking silhouette at the desk. 

‘Your houssss...?’

The word skidded to a halt. There were two silhouettes at the desk, the second sitting across from Juby: a boy, thin and rangy, no less wild-haired than the man. She tried to speak, but her tongue refused to let go of the roof of her mouth.


Book Details

ISBN:  979 8987977439

Publisher:  8n Publishing

Formats:  e-book and paperback

No. of Pages:  246 (paperback)


Purchase Links

Amazon UK

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About the Author

 MICHAEL LAWRENCE has written and published a great many books, but he's done a few other too. For instance, after leaving art school he began training as a graphic designer in a London studio before morphing into a photographer. As a photographer he took pictures for advertising agencies, publishers and newspapers, of pop stars and politicians, of fashion models and underwear, and many other kinds of people and things besides. He also worked in a travelling circus for a little while, and has been an antiques dealer, co-owned two art galleries, and made hundreds of paintings, drawings and experimental digital images. One of his private joys is recording songs (many of which he's written) under the alias Aldous U.

As a writer he's won the odd award, had books translated into twenty or so languages (one of which - 'Young Dracula' - was the inspiration for five BBC-TV series), has shuffled onto stages at literary festivals, and been interviewed on TV and radio. 'There's more,' he says, 'but I don't want to bore you. There's a lot of me in the Rainey novels, but I'm not saying which bits.'




(media courtesy of Rachel's Random Resources)

(all opinions are my own)