Category Archives: Book Review

Keeping Faith – Jodi Picoult

This is the second of Picoult’s novels that I’ve read in about as many weeks and I have to admit that I skim read most of it. I enjoyed the overall romantic and legal aspects of the novel however the religious element bored me – it was just too much.

Faith is a young girl that lives with both her parents, her mother Mariah is a previously clinically depressed and suicidal woman and her father Colin is an adulterer. Faith’s world is tipped upside down when she walks in on her father showering with another woman, of course as a little girl she doesn’t understand the ramifications of this, just that it makes her mother sad.

Next we know Faith has an imaginary friend, a friend that can heal, a friend that is a woman, a friend who is called God. Is she mad? Is she making it up? Is her mother putting thoughts into her head so that she can achieve fame? Or is she just a sad little girl?

Cue Ian Fletcher, the man to blow the lies out the water and prove that God isn’t real, or so he intends. Fletcher is hiding a family secret and when Faith begins to perform miracles he wonders if one can be saved for his family.

Fletcher is presented as a hound, a journalist with no morals but when it comes to his family he will do anything to help, with Faith proving that God may well just be real Fletcher allows himself to open to Mariah and soon they are romantically involved. As Colin fights for the custody he originally relinquished Fletcher becomes the ally no one expected.

It a responsible story but it’s not one I’d intend on reading again so this one will be destined for the charity shop.

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The Cuckoo’s Calling – Robert Galbraith

Whoops already distracted – when looking how to spell the incredible J K Rowling’s pseudonym Robert Galbraith I noticed there is a second novel in the series – cue looking on Amazon!

Dare I admit that this novel was actually good?! I hated Casual Vacancy and I think maybe that was down to high expectations as an avid fan of Rowling during my childhood, in fact her novels shaped every aspect of my childhood – I adored Harry Potter and still do.

Whilst The Cuckoo’s Calling was a slow start with a lot of background setting the ending was a crafty twist and leaving my lunch break at work with only 20 pages left to finish was almost a killer.

Comoran Strike is an injured Afghanistan war hero as well as an illegitimate child of a rockstar. Team that with the fact he lost everything and he is worth very little provides the perfect private detective. Dedicated to a fault until his temp Robin steps in. Robin has always wanted to work in the industry and when Luna Landry’s brother Jonathan employs Strike she does her utmost to help get the case solved before her time is up.

Landry was a beautiful model who everyone wanted a piece of but when she tumbled to her death everyone ruled it a suicide – but was it?

Jonathan fights to prove it was murder and from there the novel spirals further and further into darkness of deceit, murder and all out psychotic behaviour. 

I think I considered pretty much everyone close to Landry as her murderer yet the twist at the end is brilliant.

Anyway, here’s to the next one!!

 

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The Hollow – Agatha Christie

The Hollow - Agatha Christie

 

I am currently reading The Cuckoo’s Calling by Robert Galbraith but as that is taking me a little while I figured I would back track to another novel I have read recently. Do you remember me doing the Prudence and the Crow piece a while back, well this was the novel included.

I’ll admit I have never even considered reading an Agatha Christie as she is not someone who particularly enthralls me but I figured as it was included I would have to give it a go. I did pick crime novels after all! As per many short novels this was a struggle, I don’t know why but I always struggle on novels that are only a couple of hundred pages long, this is 190 pages, I think it’s because the author has to squeeze minute details into as little words as possible. I prefer the longer more drawn out process where you have time to digest the storyline.

Hilariously Poirot doesn’t seem to be a huge part of this novel, he is a neighbour of the Angkatell’s who held one of their ‘wild’ summer parties and low and behold a guest ends up dead. John Christow is the great respected doctor but when he’s found face down in the pool surrounded by his own blood his wife is the main suspect. I personally fancied his lover as the murderer but each to their own.

I won’t spoil the ending for anyone who may want to read this but I have to say the murder mystery aspect wasn’t all that exciting.

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Plain Truth – Jodi Picoult

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Okay so confession time. I’ve let this blog fall by the way side, I could come up with a number of excuses but instead let’s just get on with it!

I believe mum took this novel on holiday, on her return it went straight on to my ‘to read pile’ (honestly it’s huge!) partnered with the “I enjoyed it” statement from mum. Okay, so big expectations of this one then, as you know mine and mum’s opinions can sometimes differ. Well I’m pleased to say this time they didn’t, this book is genuinely good.

Focusing on the Amish Religion Ellie is thrown in at the deep end to defend a young Amish girl accused of suffocating her baby. Despicable I hear you say however not everything is what it seems.

Ellie has her reservations representing Katie but she takes a running leap into the culture when she volunteers to live with them so Katie can, for the mean time, avoid prison. No electricity and completely shut off from her ‘real world’ will Ellie cope?!

Katie is a strange character, the reader understands that she has had a baby, something she denies for a long time during the beginning of the novel. As her memory slowly comes back to her the reader wonders, did she actually smother her baby and then hide the body?

A dead sister, banished brother and aunt and a boyfriend that is struggling to look at her Katie slowly begins to admit how they baby came about. When visiting her brother at college she fell in love with his landlord and the rest was history. Having broken many rules and having lost her baby Katie believes that she must confess and be punished to help her in life but could the baby have died of natural causes? And how did it end up hidden?

A greatly written book with plenty of twists. Personally I suspected the dad, how about you?

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Harvesting the Heart – Jodi Picoult

 

Harvesting the Heart

 

God I love Jodi Picoult – on a good day when I haven’t read too many of her novels in a row (they can get a bit samey given half a chance) she’s an incredible author.

I will admit from the off I had to skim read this a bit as I am about as squeamish as they come, and Nicholas Prescott is a surgeon, specifically one that mends broken hearts.

Paige Prescott meets her husband when she is merely a child that has run away from home, he becomes a strong protective force in her life until she becomes pregnant. Having neglected to tell the truth at the beginning of their relationship Paige allows her childhood secret to eat her alive until one day she leaves Nicholas and baby Max to find her mother.

Paige’s mother much like her just upped and left one day with no apparent thought for her child, Paige then does the same to her father and then her child and husband.

Whilst she is fighting with her guilt she fixes her relationship with her mother enough to go home where the fight begins again. Having had to juggle baby Max and his career as the top heart surgeon Nicholas has no time for his wife and pushes her further away.

Paige finds unexpected solace with her in laws who originally tried to push her away, Astrid and Robert adore their grandchild and slowly try to encourage their daughter in law to fight for her marriage.

Paige later becomes Nicholas’ shadow within the hospital as a volunteer and it is not until the end when Max becomes gravely ill that the two bond once more.

I would urge you to read this book, it’s an emotional roller coaster but well worth the effort!

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John Bishop – How Did All This Happen?

John Bishop

I think this book frustrated me so much that it’s put me off writing slightly!!

John Bishop is a well known name in this household and I purchased this for my mum’s birthday back in December, it was one of many that has since sat in my unread pile.

It may be that because we know so much of John Bishop, and if you have read it my mum was one of the few people at his first Edinburgh fringe show, that this autobiography just didn’t hold my attention. It was that dull and slow running that my colleague said about a week and a half in ‘Are you still reading that?’ – which to be honest was the kick up the bum I needed to finish it. I think I spend on average a week reading a book.

John Bishop seems a lovely bloke with a now very happy family and decent life but as a comedian who uses his life as his material, I know most of his story. Maybe if he was to write another about the later comedic side of him it would be better.

This book has been donated to our local library.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Prudence and The Crow

I am on a Facebook page called ‘Bookworms’ and one day we discussed whether there were any book boxes, a bit like Graze/Birchbox/Glossybox etc but with a book instead of food or make up.

One of the girls managed to find one via Prudence and The Crow (here) and I decided I would subscribe but only as a one off for £12, I took the extra £2 hit because I am too lazy to try and remember to cancel my subscription.

 

Prudence and Cow

Above is a photo of the outer wrapping, it is the perfect size for a letterbox and every sticker placed on the front is a handmade touch. It is quite clearly wrapped by someone who has a passion for what they do, and it’s the handmade elements that really sell this product.

Prudence and Cow2

This is the next layer, it feels a bit like pass the parcel as I write this, again it is the personal elements like my name and the card that makes it special.

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We’re finally inside!!! The wrapped item is my book, the printed material is a lovely and really amazingly handmade book bag, a Prudence and The Crow pencil, a Pukka teabag and a mint.

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The book bag: it is so incredibly well made but I have to say I find the two types of material a bit random, I definitely prefer the second design. I don’t keep my books in any bags now but my dad has always commented how me and mum never break the spines of our books whereas my sister and him do, therefore I figure I’m quite neat with them? Saying that my work bag is a bit grotty so this could well be a welcome addition!

Prudence and Cow4

Finally, the book, I didn’t really want to break into the wrapping of this as it was so well done. I have never read any Agatha Christie so I am thoroughly intrigued.

All in all a good box as a one off and I love all the handmade touches but there’s one niggling thought in my mind and that’s that I could have bought the book for very little money elsewhere. It is this that has led to it just being a one off, but I have to say it’d make a wonderful present!

 

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Little Beach Street Bakery – Jenny Colgan

Little Beach Street Bakery

 

Following on by the slight disappointment of Sophie Kinsella’s ‘Wedding Night’ I had another of my favourite ‘chic lit’ authors in my hands. I was dubious, if Kinsella’s was so simple and predictable would this then follow suit?

The answer is no, not because its not simple or predictable but because the simplicity of such a sweet story was enjoyable.

Polly Waterford has her life turned upside down when she is made bankrupt, during her search for a new flat she finds a dilapidated house in Polbearne and her life starts to rebuild slowly but surely.

Polly bakes bread, really good bread and it is from there that she starts to build herself relationships with most of the Polbearne inhabitants except one, her landlord Gillian Manse. A name that might sound like another familiar author? 😉

Manse is a hardcore Polbearne woman but behind her is a soft lady that has had her life ruined by loss, she is not necessarily fighting for the little village to stay the same but fighting because she herself cannot leave until Polly gives her a lifeline.

Polly’s love life is focused on a fair bit in this book, there are affairs, dramas and most of all the knight in shining armour at the end.

I really enjoyed this novel so I hope you will too, oh and watch out for Neil.

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Wedding Night – Sophie Kinsella

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Meet Socks. He’s my company in the morning and loves nothing more than trying to poke his head into my cereal bowl.

Sophie Kinsella is like many authors. She has set the bar high with the Shopaholic series and unfortunately since then I don’t think her books have lived up to expectations.

The novel focuses on Lottie who has her world turned upside down when a proposal goes wrong and her sister Fliss who must stop Lottie’s wedding at all costs.

Lottie is expecting partner Richard to propose, but when he doesn’t she runs back to Greece with an old lover to live as husband and wife. Her husband Ben is a disgustingly wealthy flake who realises in the end he’s married the wrong girl.

Older sister Fliss is currently going through a divorce which makes her incredibly bitter but when she meets Ben’s best friend Lorcan she realises life isn’t so bad after all.

This book is full of warm and funny moments that are almost feasible between family members, letd face it we’re a capable of silly things when family are concerned. What let’s it down? It’s all predictable.

A good easy read but yet again it’s not quite hit the mark I expect from Kinsella.

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The Husband’s Secret – Lane Moriarty

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I had low expectations for this novel. Mum took it on holiday with her and wasn’t particularly keen however I like to give most books a go (That’s probably why my unread pile is currently so high!).

It starts off quite slow and we have three different authors which I believe exacerbates this:  Cecilia,  Tess and Rachel. The women come from different families but their lives are interlinked by a dark secret that they spend most of the novel unaware of.

Rachel’s daughter Janie was brutally murdered at 17 with no sign of the killer being brought to justice. Rachel is all consumed by the lack of closure she’s found. Combine that with her son and daughter in law taking away her beloved grandson and she may just do something drastic.

Tess has fled to Sydney following the breakdown of her marriage due to psychological infidelity. I mean that in the way that her husband hasn’t quite been unfaithful. Tess meets up with an old boyfriend in Sydney that is implicated more than you could believe in this narrative. Is he the killer?

And then I come onto Cecilia. Cecilia is married to John-Paul, they have a wonderful life with beautiful children yet when Cecilia finds a letter it turns her world upside down. John-Paul has the ability to ruin everyone’s lives but what will happen when his comes tumbling down around him?

I quite liked this novel. Although it had some predictable entities to it there were enough twists to keep me intrigued.

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