Thursday, 14 November 2024
The King of Kazam by Jen Hyatt and Cassandra Harrison - Question 1 - #readalong #blogtour
Wednesday, 10 July 2024
A Town Called Solace by Mary Lawson - #bookreview
There were four boxes. Big Ones. They must have lots of things in them because they were heavy, you could tell by the way the man walked when he carried them in, stooped over, knees bent. He brought them right into Mrs Orchard's house, next door to Clara's, that first evening and put them on the floor in the living room and just left them there...
***
Clara's sister is missing. Angry, rebellious Rose had a row with their mother, stormed out of the house and simply disappeared. Seven-year-old Clara, isolated by her distraught parents' efforts to protect her from the truth, is grief-stricken and bewildered.
Liam Kane, newly divorced, newly unemployed, newly arrived in this small northern town, moves into the house next door, a house left to him by an old woman he can barely remember, and within hours gets a visit from the police. It seems he's suspected of a crime.
At the end of her life Elizabeth Orchard is thinking about a crime too, one committed thirty years ago that had tragic consequences for two families and in particular for one small child. She desperately wants to make amends before she dies.
A Town Called Solace explores the relationships of these three people brought together by fate and the mistakes of the past. By turns gripping and darkly funny, it uncovers the layers of grief and remorse and love that connect us, but shows that sometimes a new life is possible.
***
Many years ago, I read Mary Lawson's novel, Crow Lake. This was prior to me even joining Good Reads which I did in 2008. I cannot really remember much about it, other than that I really enjoyed it, and I notice that at some point I have marked it for a re-read on Good Reads.
A Town Called Solace was suggested as this month's read at my Book Club. I was very keen to read it and it lived up to all of my expectations.
The story is told from three different perspectives. The book starts with seven year old Clara, whose sixteen year old sister, Rose, has gone missing. We also have chapters dedicated to Liam and to Elizabeth Orchard, the neighbour of Clara. These three characters are superbly depicted with distinct voices. There was never any doubt regarding which character I was reading. Each of the three characters were facing challenges in their lives, and they interweaved with one another perfectly.
I enjoyed reading about the secondary characters too, each with a part to play with helping to move the story along. Equally well portrayed and with a hand in helping Clara, Liam and Mrs. Orchard towards the healing which they each need.
Set in the fictional town of Solace, Canada, Ms Lawson has captured the small town feel extremely well. The sometimes claustrophobic nature of such a place is wonderfully depicted and it was easy to think that this place was real. Of course, it was just that the author understood and portrayed the experience of living in a small town so well.
This is one of the best novels I have read this year. I read a library copy of it but am seriously considering buying a copy as it would be a pleasure just to have this on my shelf, with the prospect of reading again at some point.
A brilliant novel which I highly recommend.
ISBN: 978 1529113433
Publisher: Vintage
Formats: e-book, audio, hardback and paperback
No. of Pages: 304 (paperback)
About the Author:
Mary Lawson was born and brought up in the small farming community of Blackwell, near Sarnia, Ontario. Her family had a summer cottage in northern Ontario, in an area of lakes and rocks and forests known as the Canadian Shield. It remains, Lawson says, her favourite landscape, and it has played a major role in her writing.
After graduating from McGill University in Montreal she went to England for a holiday, ran out of money, had to find a job, fell in love with a colleague and married him. They have two sons and live in Kingston upon Thames, near London.
Lawson began writing when her children went to school. For some years she dabbled with short stories, which she sold to women’s magazines, but it wasn’t until she set one of those stories in Canada and was advised by an editor to turn it into a novel that she finally found her voice and discovered what she wanted to write about.
Crow Lake, her first novel, published when Lawson was 55, sold in 28 countries. It spent 75 weeks on the bestseller list in Canada, won the Amazon.ca First Novel Award, was a New York Times bestseller and was chosen as a Book of the Year by the New York Times, The Sunday Times, The Washington Post and The Globe and Mail. The Other Side of the Bridge, her second novel, was long-listed for the Man Booker Prize and was a Richard and Judy Summer Read in the UK. Road Ends, published to critical acclaim in 2014, was a top-ten bestseller, described by the New York Times as “tender and surprising.. a vivid and evocative tale”.
Lawson’s fourth novel, A Town Called Solace, published in February 2021, is another top-ten best seller getting rave reviews, and was longlisted for the Booker Prize.
(author media courtesy of her website http://www.marylawson.ca/bio/)
(all opinions are my own)
Tuesday, 13 February 2024
A Kestrel for a Knave by Barry Hines - #bookreview
Tuesday, 9 January 2024
Maisy's Big Book of Kindness by Lucy Cousins - #bookreview
Tuesday, 20 June 2023
Meet the Bears: An Around the World Adventure by Kate Peridot and Becca Hall - #BookReview #blogtour
So, you love bears?
Fantastic! You have great taste.
Bears are smart.
Bears are curious.
Bears are strong.
And they can smell you coming from miles away.
***
Pack your teddy and your bear-proof lunchbox and join us on a thrilling international adventure to meet the world's eight species of bears. From polar bears to giant pandas, from spectacled bears to the asiatic moon bears, find out what makes bears so amazing. But what sort of bear is your teddy?
Includes a map of the world showing bear hotspots and a bear size comparison spread.
***
Right from the outset this book has everything to delight a child. The cover, which was designed and illustrated by Becca Hall, is engaging with it's circular framing illustrations of each of the bears which are described in more detail within the book itself.
Each bear section contains an illustration of a child, her father and her teddy bear, whereby the father poses the question to his daughter, "Is your teddy a polar/brown/black etc. bear?" I think children will really enjoy the consistency of them in each different bear section.
Each of the bears is described in terms of look, fur, habitat and several other details about each type of bear; from what they eat to where in the world they live. Importantly, the book also offers advice regarding how to keep safe, should one encounter a bear.
I appreciated the section that addressed animals who are called bears but actually are not part of the bear family - such as koala and bearcat.
There is a lovely world map detailing where each of the bear species reside, along with a size comparison chart.
It is a wonderful book which has been well written and illustrated and will appeal greatly to children around 6 - 8 years of age.
I have previously reviewed one of Kate Peridot's books, Caring Conservationists, and if you would like to read my review you can do so by clicking here.
ISBN: 978 1783129829
Publisher: Welbeck
Formats: e-book and hardback
No. of Pages: 48 (hardback)
You can find more about Becca on her website https://www.beccahallillustration.co.uk/
(Book courtesy of the publisher - author and illustrator info from their own websites)
*Disclosure: I only recommend books I would buy myself and all opinions expressed here are my own. This post contains an affiliate link from which I may earn a small commission.
Monday, 12 June 2023
Tails of Two Spaniels by Heather Peck - Illustrated by Helen Morrish - #BookReview #blogtour
Farmer Fred had lost his dog. Scratchy Patch had one white patch over one eye and one brown patch over the other eye. She also had long soft ears and the waggiest tail you ever saw. If you talked to her, she wagged her tails a lot. But if she didn't understand what you said, she sat down and scratched while she thought very hard. Patch normally spend most of her time with Fred, checking round the hens, being polite to the geese, and chasing the rats. But today she had gone missing...
***
Springer Spaniel Patch has four puppies on the farm where she lives with Marigold the House Cow, Gertie Goose, Sally-for-short the Sow, and lots of worried woollies. But the puppies can't stay forever and they have a lot to learn.
A story of the antics of puppies, told from the puppies' perspective and brought to life by charming illustrations.
***
This utterly charming book was a delight to read. It has been nicely illustrated by Helen Morrish and will appeal to any reader who likes stories about animals.
There is some useful information contained within the story about how to care for a pet dog and the committment it needs. I loved the way the majority of the book was told from the perspective of the two puppies, Bramble and Bracken, who leave the farm to go to their 'forever home', and it was interesting to envisage the world through their eyes.
This book has been categorised as being suitable for nine to eleven year olds. However, I think more able readers would equally enjoy this too. It is also ideal for sharing with younger children. Indeed, my childhood is a long time behind me but I very much enjoyed reading this and look forward to reading it to the younger members of my family.
ISBN: 978 1915769091
Publisher: Ormesby Publishing
Formats: e-book and paperback
No. of Pages: 68 (paperback)
Wednesday, 7 June 2023
My Heart was a Tree: Poems and Stories to Celebrate Trees by Michael Morpurgo and Yuval Zommer - #BookReview #poetry #poems #stories
The poems and stories in this book have been written because, every day that I can, I go for a walk in the bluebell woods behind our house. I know every one of the trees I pass. They hear me coming, they listen to me. I listen to them, to the whisper of them, the roaring of them, the creaking of them.
One story above all the others, imspired me to write about trees. It is The Man who planted Trees, by Jean Giono, about an old shepherd in the hills of Provence who makes it his life's work to create a forest high on the arid rocky slopes where very little grew.
***
Discover the beauty and wonder of trees in this stunningly illustrated collection of poetry and stories celebrating trees and what they mean to the world around us . . .
Inspired by the woods around his home, the mighty forests that support our life on Earth, and the Ted Hughes poem which gives this book its title, My Heart Was a Tree is a celebration, and Sir Michael Morpurgo's love letter to trees.
There are stories from an ancient olive remembering Odysseus and Penelope, and from a eucalyptus that gave shelter to a koala; from a piece of driftwood that was made into a chair, and from a tiny sapling carried by a refugee as a reminder of home – these are poems and stories that will amuse, move and energise families and readers of all ages to appreciate the beauty and wonder of trees.
Yuval Zommer's beautiful, detailed illustrations bring the natural world to life, and make My Heart Was a Tree a book to pore over for hours and hours, discovering something new each time.
***
This book is perfect in every way. Not only does it contain a gorgeous selection of poems and stories by Michael Morpurgo, but it also has the most delightful illustrations by Yuval Zommer. The collaboration between a best selling author and an award winning artist guaranteed that this book would be something rather special.
Written in celebration of trees in all their forms - it is a book very relevant to today's environment. It looks at the impact that trees have on our lives, in our communities as well as in the wider world.
I shared a couple of these poems with my six-year-old grandson and he enjoyed listening to them very much. The illustrations support the text perfectly and it made for a wonderful opportunity to create memories for us both.
If I had to choose a favourite from this superb collection it would have to be the poem, Driftwood. It tells of the nine lives lived by this tree and begins:
This chair was born where I was born,
In the forests of Nova Scotia,
About a thousand years ago.
Maybe more, who's counting?
It is a delightful poem which goes on to tell of its journey.
I highly recommend this collection of poems and stories. Regardless of whether you have a child in your life to share this with, it makes for lovely reading and I can envisage dipping back into it periodically.
ISBN: 978 1529094794
Publisher: Two Hoots
Formats: e-book and hardcover
No. of Pages: 96 (hardcover)
Support Independent Bookshops - Buy from Bookshop.org *
Sir Michael Andrew Morpurgo, OBE, FRSL is the author of many books for children, five of which have been made into films. He also writes his own screenplays and libretti for opera.
Born in St Albans, Hertfordshire, in 1943, he was evacuated to Cumberland during the last years of the Second World War, then returned to London, moving later to Essex. After a brief and unsuccessful spell in the army, he took up teaching and started to write.
He left teaching after ten years in order to set up 'Farms for City Children' with his wife. They have three farms in Devon, Wales and Gloucestershire, open to inner city school children who come to stay and work with the animals. In 1999 this work was publicly recognised when he and his wife were invested a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) for services to youth. In 2003, he was advanced to an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE). He became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature (FRSL) in 2004. He was knighted in the 2018 for his services to literature and charity.
He is also a father and grandfather, so children have always played a large part in his life. Every year he and his family spend time in the Scilly Isles, the setting for three of his books.
(ARC courtesy of NetGalley, author photo and info from GoodReads and illustrator photo and info from Caroline Sheldon Literary Agency)
Support Independent Bookshops - Buy from Bookshop.org *
*Disclosure: I only recommend books I would buy myself and all opinions expressed here are my own. This post contains an affiliate link from which I may earn a small commission.
Wednesday, 24 May 2023
The Stories Grandma Forgot (and How I Found Them) by Nadine Aisha Jassat - #bookreview #NetGalley
Today in English,
the teacher asked us to write about who we are.
I could see my friend Jess
scribbling next to me,
her pen moving fast across the page.
I looked up at the prompt on the board, the words 'I Am' standing out like a challenge,
like they're asking for something more than I really understand...
***
Twelve-year-old Nyla's dad died when she was four, or that's what she's been told. So when Grandma Farida insists she saw him in the supermarket, Nyla wonders if she is 'time-travelling' again - the phrase she uses when Grandma forgets.
But when Grandma asks Nyla to find her dad and bring him home, Nyla promises that she will.
As Nyla sets out on her journey, she hopes that uncovering the past will help her to understand the mystery at the heart of her family ... and to work out who she is.
A page-turning verse novel about memory and identity, and a bond that soars above all else.
***
This book for children has been beautifully written in verse and was a joy to read.
The main character, Nyla, is portrayed extremely well. She assists in caring for her grandmother who has Altzheimers and is a loving and dependable girl.
When asked to write a school project about her favourite family member, Nyla sees this as the perfect opportunity to write about her father who passed away a few years before, and find out more about him. However, when Nyla's grandmother, claims to have recently seen her son, Nyla questions whether he really has died or whether he just left them.
The book was very moving and there were several times when I wanted to give Nyla a hug and tell her it was all going to be okay. Thankfully, the author provides some strong role models in whom Nyla can ultimately find emotional safety.
Written with compassion and sensitivity, the author deals with themes of racism, bullying and how we can understand our place in the world.
It is a perfect addition to children's book shelves, and I highly recommend it.
ISBN: 978 1510111578
Publisher: Orion Children's Books
Formats: e-book and paperback
No. of Pages: 240 (paperback)
Support Independent Bookshops - Buy from Bookshop.org *
Age: Middle Grade (8 - 12)
*Disclosure: I only recommend books I would buy myself and all opinions expressed here are my own. This post contains an affiliate link from which I may earn a small commission.
Wednesday, 17 May 2023
Ten Exciting New Releases in June 2023
I can hardly believe that June is only a couple of weeks away. I am quietly confident that this month will bring weather which is nice enough to sit in the garden with a book. Fingers crossed everyone!
Here are ten new releases that look exciting.
Winner of the Brage Prize, the most prestigious award in Norwegian Literature, The Loneliness in Lydia Erneman's Life is a quiet, beautiful exploration of solitude and how we relate to other beings. It has been lauded by European critics for doing something very rare: offering deep pleasure and joy in reading with little theatrics.
Having grown up as an only child in Northern Sweden, Lydia is used to isolation and being on her own. She fills her days with her love of animals, nature, and hard work. She eventually settles into a career as a vet in rural Norway and embraces the rhythms of rural life. In a series of poetic sketches, Lydia tends to the animals in her community, spends time with her aging parents, and falls in love. Despite an increasing need for closer human contact that begins to encroach on her contented solitude, ultimately it is Lydia's satisfaction with her inner life that speaks of an elegance and hope often lost in these clamoring times.
Written in concise prose, the gravity and tranquility of this novel make it a gift― a soothing, contemplative offering about the depths of our inner worlds.
Friday, 28 April 2023
Caring Conservationists Who Are Changing Our Planet by Kate Peridot & Illustrated by Sarah Long - #BookReview #Blogtour
Step into nature and look around you. Hundreds of creatures are going about their day: digging, building, hunting and harvesting. Our planet is home to around 8.7 million species of animals and plants and each is unique, extraordinary and important.
Sadly, many wild animals, plants and their habitats are disappearing, from the mammals in the forests to the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, even once plentiful insects. Today over one-million animal and plant species are at risk of extinction and we, humans, are the main cause... But there is still hope and we can all help make a BIG difference.
***
Travel around the world and discover the stories of 20 conservationists and the endangered animals they are helping to save, including the orangutang, blue whale, Indian tiger, rhino, honeybee, Komodo dragon and sea turtle. Positive, uplifting and packed full of information, with 20 fun activities for children to try, this book will show children no one is too small to make a difference.
***
This is a lovely book aimed at primary school aged children. It is full of information and beautifully illustrated.
Each page is dedicated to an individual conservationist, both living and dead, young and old, and includes a section on 'how to be a wildlife champion." Each page includes activity ideas for children to investigate and suggests ways in which children can care for wildlife in their own geographical area.
Although the book covers conservationists from across the world, its chief message is that everyone can make a difference, even in a small way - from building bee hotels to putting a bell on the collar of a pet cat. The book is full of examples on how to protect wildlife.
I think children will enjoy reading this book for themselves as well as sharing it with an adult. I could also envisage that it could be a useful teaching aid. All school libraries would benefit from having a copy of this inspirational book on their shelves.
ISBN: 978 1529506150
Publisher: Walker Books
Formats: Hardback
No. of Pages: 48
Support Independent Bookshops - Buy from Bookshop.org *
Thursday, 10 February 2022
Desert Island Books with Anne Goodwin
For those of you who are not familiar with Anne's work, she is the author of Sugar and Snails, Underneath and Matilda Windsor is Coming Home. You can read my reviews of two of these titles by clicking on the title links.
She is also the author of a book of prize winning short stories, Becoming Someone.
Do hop over to her website where she is kindly offering a free e-copy of her other collection of short stories, Somebody's Daughter, to anyone who subscribes to her website Annethology
So, Anne, how do you think you would get on if you were stranded on a desert island?
I doubt I’d thrive on a desert island. Although I made a double bed years ago in woodwork class, I’m not very practical. I’d struggle to build a shelter and catch my own food. Plus, although content with my own company, solitary confinement could tip me over the edge. These eight books might prevent me going mad.
Just William by Richmal CromptonAs a child, I loved the Just William books, although I was never as adventurous as the eponymous hero, who would probably have looked down on me as I wasn’t middle-class and I wasn’t a boy. Richmal Crompton’s series is far superior to the other classics of my 60's childhood – such as Enid Blyton’s Famous Five – because, through the humour, we can both identify with William and see the error of his ways.
With time to kill on my desert island, I’m sure I’d enjoy George Eliot’s Middlemarch much more than when I studied it for English A-level. I reckon I’m finally old enough to get the humour, the pathos and the politics, and to appreciate the patience of Mrs Blair, who had to teach it to a bunch of uncultured teens.
Another classic I’d like to take with me, which I read unprompted in my slightly younger teens, is Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre. I want this less for the story of the orphaned girl who won’t to be beaten than for reminders of the Peak District, where I lead a guided walk around the settings believed to have inspired the novel. (Yup, that’s Derbyshire, not Yorkshire, the better-known Brontë territory!)
I travelled a lot in my 20's, 30's and 40's; although my feet have now stopped itching, trapped on that island, I might get nostalgic for those times. I’ve chosen a non-fiction book, Third-Class Ticket by Heather Wood, as a reminder of the five months I spent on the Indian subcontinent, staying in rural villages as well as seeing the famous sites. This is a moving account of a journey made in 1969 by forty Bengalis who, being poor and uneducated, never expected to leave their village, and the Western woman who had the privilege of accompanying them for 15,000 kilometres over seven months.
My travels punctuated my career as a clinical psychologist in mental health services in the NHS. The book I’ve selected as a memento of that part of my life was actually published shortly after I had taken early retirement: The Examined Life by Stephen Grosz is a collection of psychoanalytic case studies that read like short stories. There’s so much wisdom in these pieces, I could reread them a thousand times and never get bored.
One novel that almost as illuminating and compassionate about how we humans delude ourselves is Jonathan Franzen’s The Corrections. At the heart of the novel is a premise familiar from schmaltzy movies: Enid Lambert wants her three adult children to spend one last Christmas in the family home. Yet the reader soon gathers that Enid wants the impossible: the family she and her husband, Alfred, have fashioned is beyond repair. It’s the perfect antidote to loneliness in solitude: feeling lonely among our nearest and dearest is far worse.
Another novel I find particularly psychologically astute is Lionel Shriver’s We Need to Talk about Kevin, about a woman whose teenage son commits a terrible crime. To what extent is Eva culpable in how she’s raised him? How much are the family dynamics shaped by trans-generational trauma? One of the strengths of this novel is how, although (we think) we know the ending from the beginning, the tension is electric.
I wasn’t sure if I should ask for a bumper notebook for my final choice for all the masterpieces I’m bound to write on my island retreat. If that’s not allowed, or it’s already there, I’ll have another doorstopper novel: Adam Johnson’s The Orphan Master’s Son. After nearly 600 pages in the Democratic Republic of North Korea, I’ll be grateful to be marooned far from cruel dictatorships or any human society at all. A love story, a thriller, a dystopian political satire, a heart-warming tale of the endurance of the human spirit or a trauma narrative; for me, it’s about the wasteland of a world where the individual is divorced from his/her own story and fiction is an instrument of control.
What a fantastic selection of books, and I would definitely take some of those along if I were stranded. Thank you Anne for sharing your choices and for being the first author to launch this series of blog posts.
If you are an author and would be interested in taking part then please let me know.