Revisiting The Thunder Girls by Melanie Blake

The Thunder Girls

I very rarely return to a book here on Linda’s Book Bag but with Melanie Blake’s The Thunder Girls, a story I thoroughly enjoyed and out as a special 99p e-book this month on Kindle, I am delighted to support this blog tour and would like to thank Martina Ticic at Midas PR for inviting me to participate.

You can read my original review of The Thunder Girls (along with a brief account of a fabulous launch event I attended for the book) here.

The Thunder Girls was published by Pan Macmillan on 11th July 2019 and is available for purchase through these links and in special 99p e-book until the end of April here.

The Thunder Girls

The Thunder Girls

THE

Chrissie, Roxanne, Carly and Anita, an eighties pop sensation outselling and out-classing their competition. Until it all comes to an abrupt end and three of their careers are over, and so is their friendship.

THUNDER

Thirty years later, their old record label wants the band back together for a huge money-making concert. But the wounds are deep and some need this gig more than others.

In those decades apart life was far from the dream they were living as members of The Thunder Girls. Breakdowns, bankruptcy, addiction and divorce have been a constant part of their lives. They’ve been to hell and back, and some are still there.

GIRLS

Can the past be laid to rest for a price, or is there more to this reunion than any of them could possibly know? Whilst they all hunger for a taste of success a second time around, someone is plotting their downfall in the deadliest way possible . . .

Melanie and Lockdown!

Melanie Blake has said that lockdown has turned out to be one of the most positive and life-affirming times in her life against the odds.

As one of the UK’s most successful female entrepreneurs, self-made millionaire and an agent for leading TV stars from Coronation Street, Emmerdale, Hollyoaks, EastEnders and Loose Women as well as a stable of theatre and live performers, when the lockdown started, all performance related income ceased. Having to furlough her staff and put her agency on ice until things return to normal meant the loss of nearly a million pounds overnight. On top of this, Blake and her long term partner parted ways the week before the lockdown started, so she found herself alone and single for the first time in her life.

Melanie says that the experience of losing a fortune and breaking up with her partner has completely transformed her and for the first time in her life she has been able to stop, take stock and put herself first. She is the first to admit that she was a slave to her job and has worked every single day of her life since she was 16 years old and that she could never be alone, always needing a man by her side.

The lockdown is the first time she has been able to stop work and the first time she has found herself living on her own, which she says has completely changed her for the better.

She has started a “binge-read” book group with her street in North London. Eight of her neighbours “meet” three times a week, opening their windows and discussing their chosen books across the street with a glass of fizz. Each neighbour orders the books online and then drops them off on their neighbour’s doorstep at night. They are reading three books a week, which is why they are calling it the Binge Read Book Club.

A handbag addict, with an enviable collection of Chanel handbags, with nowhere to use them, it made her realise just how frivolous it was to have a ‘handbag room’ and she started gifting her prized – and many of them still in the box – handbags to friends who had lost their jobs or loved ones during the pandemic. She has taken down her prize display of handbags in her house and replaced them with books.

The loss of her income has made her re-evaluate what is important in life. Melanie was no stranger to a weekly £500 facial and as a blow dry addict hadn’t washed her own hair in over a decade, but now is taking pride in looking after herself at home and spending time in her own company.

Finally, she has found time to finish her second novel, she had all but given up on it, having suffered from writer’s block for six months, but has now finally found the headspace she needed to write – none of which would have been possible without finding herself in lockdown.

About Melanie Blake

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At fifteen years old Melanie Blake was told by her high school career advisers that her decision to do work experience at a local record shop was an ‘embarrassment and a clear example that she wouldn’t go far in life or her career’. They were wrong. By twenty-one she was working at the BBC’s iconic Top of the Pops show and by twenty-seven she had built a reputation as one of the UK’s leading music and entertainment managers, with her own agency and a roster of award-winning artists who had sold more than 100 million records.

After a decade at the top, Melanie decided to manage a smaller client list and concentrate on her other passion, writing – first as a columnist for a national newspaper, then as a playwright and now as a novelist. They say write about what you know, and having lived and breathed every aspect of the music and entertainment industry, in The Thunder Girls she certainly has.

Find out more by following Melanie on Twitter @MelanieBlakeUK or visiting The Thunder Girls website and there’s a Thunder Girls Facebook page here too.

There’s more with these other bloggers too:

Thunder Girls final banner

Maury the Miserable Vampire by Jeff Roland

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I’ve been trying to feature books for children during the current global crisis when so many parents are home schooling and would like to thank author Jeff Roland for sending me a copy of Maury the Miserable Vampire in return for an honest review.

Along with other Maury merchandise, Maury the Miserable Vampire is available for purchase here.

Maury the Miserable Vampire

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Maury the Miserable Vampire lived in a cold, dark castle and he liked it that way. He never laughed, he never smiled, and he never went outside.

When his only friend, Barry the Bat, suddenly disappears, Maury must summon the courage to set out into the world for the very first time in order to find him.

Along the way, Maury meets friendly, funny monsters from across the globe and learns about other cultures, teamwork and, most importantly, the value of friendship.

My Review of Maury the Miserable Vampire

Maury is always miserable.

Maury the Miserable Vampire is a charming story for young children that not only entertains, but educates too as Maury finds himself travelling the world from Egypt to Europe in search of his friend Barry.

Maury the Miserable Vampire is written in a simple style that can be read to children or which can be read independently, with an excellent balance of text to image and white space. There’s evocative and effective onomatopoeia, ellipsis, rhetorical questions and a lovely balance of different sentence lengths to retain attention and give pace to the story.

I thoroughly enjoyed the incorporation of traditional figures from horror such as witches, vampires, mummies and werewolves as these might usually scare children but here they are seen as kind and caring individuals so that children’s fears can be dissipated. They way they are depicted in the illustrations is charming too and I appreciated the range of skin tones because it gives equality of status to all regardless of race, even when they are green!

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In fact, that’s one of the themes Jeff Roland includes so well into Maury the Miserable Vampire. He celebrates difference and shows young readers that they can be friends with others who might seem very different. Themes of friendship, team work and caring come through very strongly so that children can learn how to exist alongside their peers.

Maury himself is a character many young children will empathise with. He initially struggles with the unfamiliar, and it is only when he tries and goes beyond his usual comfort zone that he succeeds and realises he needs to listen as well as speak. His experience is a valuable life lesson for children.

I thought Maury the Miserable Vampire was a thoroughly appealing and entertaining story that children will love.

About Jeff Roland

jeff roland

Jeff Roland works as a writer and creative producer for various film, television and marketing companies in Los Angeles, CA. He once ate four foot-long chili dogs in a row and lived.

You can follow Jeff on Twitter @JefeRolando and visit his Maury website. You’ll find Maury on Facebook too!

Staying in with Caro Land

Convictions

Whilst we’re unable to meet in person at the moment, it’s lovely to ‘stay in’ virtually with authors and I’m delighted to welcome Caro Land to spend the evening with me and tell us all about one of her books.

Staying in with Caro Land

Welcome back to Linda’s Book Bag, Caro and thank you for agreeing to stay in with me.

Thanks for having me to stay!

Tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening?

Convictions

Tonight I’ve brought along CONVICTIONS, the start of a legal drama series starring my feisty solicitor protagonist Natalie Bach. It’s written under my pen name Caro Land and the follow-up CONFESSIONS will be published in June this year.

How exciting to have a new series. Congratulations. And for those who don’t realise, Caro’s other author name is Caroline England and she has featured here on the blog before with a fabulous guest post to celebrate Beneath The Skin.

beneath the skin

Why did you choose to bring CONVICTIONS?

I have brought it along because I think you’ll love Natalie Bach. Readers have described her as smart and strong but with a vulnerable side. She’s fun, likes to stick up for the underdog and practise her self-styled feminism whenever she can. The only trouble is that at times she treads a fine line between helping and hindering.

I can think of several people who tread that fine line Caro! What can we expect from an evening in with CONVICTIONS?

CONVICTIONS is a side step from my Caroline England psychological thrillers Beneath the Skin, My Husband’s Lies and Betray Her as the plot has a backdrop of a solicitor’s office.

caro books

After a five year absence, Natalie returns to Manchester. Her old boss is delighted to have her back at Goldman Law, but his partner, Wesley Hughes, is less keen.

Just like old times, Jack Goldman immediately embroils Nat with cases he would prefer to keep away from prying eyes, including a criminal charge against his estranged son Julian. Nat soon gets stuck into raft of legal, ethical and moral dilemmas which, with the help of fellow lawyer Gavin Savage, she eventually untangles.

Though the story touches on aspects of the law, including crime, sexual assault, entrapment, abuse of power and attempted murder, relationships are at the fore of the narrative. And as usual with all my novels, there are twists, turns, reveals and some darkness. However, there is humour too, so I would describe it as more intriguing legal uplit than a taut thriller.

CONVICTIONS sounds brilliant. I’m thrilled I have it on my TBR to read as soon as I can Caro.

What else have you brought along and why?

Don’t worry, I haven’t brought along a legal tome from my lawyer days! Natalie and her escapades have a legal setting but they don’t dwell on the many dull aspects of the law.

That’s a relief!

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I have brought along two of my three cats – Poppy and Lewie – who also happen to live with Natalie!

That’s perfect (or should that be purrfect?) Caro. I am a real cat lover. If you’d like to leave Poppy and Lewie behind when you go that would be wonderful! Thanks so much for staying in with me and chatting with me all about CONVICTIONS. Let me tell blog readers what else they need to know:

CONVICTIONS

Convictions

There are two sides to every crime…

Returning home to care for her ill mother, and approaching her fortieth birthday, Natalie Bach is devastated when she’s dumped without explanation by her long-term boyfriend.

Struggling to pick herself up, she’s offered her old job at Goldman Law. Jack Goldman’s estranged son Julian has been arrested for attempted murder and he wants Natalie to find out why.

With the help of fellow solicitor Gavin Savage, Natalie sets out to investigate, but with a series of red herrings ahead, will she ever discover the truth?

And can Natalie avoid her personal problems interfering with the case?

Published by Bloodhound on 27th January 2020, CONVICTIONS is available for purchase here.

About Caro Land

Caroline+England

Caro Land is the pen name of Caroline England.

Born in Sheffield, Caroline studied Law at the University of Manchester and stayed over the border. Caroline was a divorce and professional indemnity lawyer. She turned to writing when she deserted the law to bring up her three lovely daughters. Caroline has had short stories and poems published in a variety of literary publications and anthologies.

Caroline writes domestic psychological thrillers. Her debut novel, Beneath The Skin, known also as The Wife’s Secret in eBook, was published by Avon HarperCollins in October 2017. Her second novel, My Husband’s Lies, followed in May 2018 and became a Kindle top ten bestseller. Her latest novel, Betray Her, published by Piatkus of Little, Brown Book Group, is now available as an eBook, audiobook and paperback.

Caroline has two dark, twisty short story collections available on Amazon, both in eBook and paperback, Watching Horsepats Feed The Roses and Hanged By The Neck.

Caroline also writes under the pen name Caro Land. Her first Natalie Bach legal suspense, CONVICTIONS, was published by Bloodhound Books in January 2020. The follow up, CONFESSIONS, will publish in June 2020

You can follow Caroline on Twitter @CazEngland and find her on Instagram and  Facebook. Visit her website for further information.

#SUDTP20 Shortlist

2020 Shortlist Banner (Large)

I’m thrilled to feature the Swansea University Dylan Thomas Prize shortlist on Linda’s Book Bag, not least because Surge by Jay Bernard, that I reviewed here, has made it through to the final six and I was lucky enough to attend the shortlist evening at the British Library last year. You can read about that evening here. Also, one of this year’s judges, Ian McMillan will, world events permitting, be one of the authors at the Deepings Literary Festival, where I live, next year.

Worth £30,000, it is one of the UK’s most prestigious literary prizes as well as the world’s largest literary prize for young writers. Awarded for the best published literary work in the English language, written by an author aged 39 or under, the Prize celebrates the international world of fiction in all its forms including poetry, novels, short stories and drama.

With life currently very different, this year the Swansea University Dylan Thomas Prizewinner will be announced at 19:00 GMT Thursday 14th May in a virtual ceremony.

You can find all the latest news about this year’s award on Twitter by following #IDTP20 or @dylanthomprize.

The Swansea University website has all you need to know too.

Celebrating the Prize’s 15th anniversary the Swansea University Dylan Thomas Prize is this year dominated by young and experimental poets:

2020 Shortlist Author Grid (Large)

  • Surge – Jay Bernard (Chatto & Windus)
  • Flèche – Mary Jean Chan (Faber & Faber)
  • Inland – Téa Obreht (Weidenfeld & Nicolson)
  • If All the World and Love were Young – Stephen Sexton (Penguin Random House)
  • On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous – Ocean Vuong (Jonathan Cape, Vintage)
  • Lot – Bryan Washington (Atlantic Books)

From Jay Bernard whose collection Surge addresses black radical British history against the backdrop of the Grenfell and Windrush scandals, to Hong Kong-born LGBTQ+ poet Mary Jean Chan for Flèche which tackles themes of multilingualism, queerness, psychoanalysis and cultural history and Belfast poet Stephen Sexton who explores grief through his love of Super Mario Games, each are recognised for their powerful, political and deeply personal debut collections.

In fiction three incredibly talented international writers are recognised, including Vietnamese-American poet and essayist Ocean Vuong who is celebrated for his international bestselling lyrical novel On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous, Belgrade-born Orange Prize winner Téa Obreht whose latest novel Inland paints a portrait of the American dream in the Wild West and Bryan Washington’s Lot which presents a collection of interlinked short stories deep-diving into his native Houston.

About the six shortlisted titles,who were judged by a bumper guest panel, the chair of the judges Swansea University’s Professor Dai Smith CBE said:

The shortlist for 2020 ranges across the genres of poetry, short form fiction and the novel, and each work manages to address upfront the pressing social and personal concerns and dilemmas of our time. But what suddenly stands out in stark relief, amidst the overwhelming global nature of the crisis in which all humanity now finds itself struggling to cope, are the universal values which these disparate books highlight: compassion, empathy, courage against despair, anger against indifference, love in despite of everything. In a very dark time these six supremely talented young writers do what all such writers do: they light the way, and so must be read for all our sakes.”

Let’s take a look at each of the shortlisted works:

Surge – Jay Bernard (Chatto & Windus)

surge

Jay Bernard’s extraordinary debut is a fearlessly original exploration of the black British archive: an enquiry into the New Cross Fire of 1981, a house fire at a birthday party in south London in which thirteen young black people were killed.

Dubbed the ‘New Cross Massacre’, the fire was initially believed to be a racist attack, and the indifference with which the tragedy was met by the state triggered a new era of race relations in Britain.

Tracing a line from New Cross to the ‘towers of blood’ of the Grenfell fire, this urgent collection speaks with, in and of the voices of the past, brought back by the incantation of dancehall rhythms and the music of Jamaican patois, to form a living presence in the absence of justice.

A ground-breaking work of excavation, memory and activism – both political and personal, witness and documentary – Surge shines a much-needed light on an unacknowledged chapter in British history, one that powerfully resonates in our present moment.

About Jay Bernard

Jay

Jay Bernard is the author of the pamphlets Your Sign is Cuckoo, Girl (Tall Lighthouse, 2008), English Breakfast (Math Paper Press, 2013) and The Red and Yellow Nothing (Ink Sweat & Tears Press, 2016), which was shortlisted for the Ted Hughes Award 2017. A film programmer at BFI Flare and an archivist at Statewatch, they also participated in ‘The Complete Works II’ project in 2014, mentored by Kei Miller. Jay was a Foyle Young Poet of the Year in 2005 and a winner of SLAMbassadors UK spoken word championship. Their poems have been collected in Voice Recognition: 21 Poets for the 21st Century (Bloodaxe, 2009), The Salt Book of Younger Poets (Salt, 2011), Ten: The New Wave (Bloodaxe, 2014) and Out of Bounds: British Black & Asian Poets (Bloodaxe, 2014).

You can find out more on Jay’s website.

Flèche – Mary Jean Chan (Faber & Faber)

Mary Jean Chan - Fleche

Much like the fencer who must constantly read and respond to her opponent’s tactics during a fencing bout, this debut collection by Mary Jean Chan deftly examines relationships at once conflictual and tender.

Flèche(the French word for ‘arrow’) is an offensive technique commonly used in épée, a competitive sport of the poet’s teenage and young adult years. This cross-linguistic pun presents the queer, non-white body as both vulnerable (‘flesh’) and weaponised (‘flèche‘) in public and private spaces. Themes of multilingualism, queerness, post-colonialism, psychoanalysis and cultural history emerge by means of an imagined personal, maternal and national biography, spoken by a polyphony of female voices. The result is a series of poems that are urgent and hard-hitting as Chan keeps her readers on their toes, dazzling and devastating them by turn.

About Mary Jean Chan

Mary Jean Chan (c) Forward Prizes for Poetry Adrian Pope

Mary Jean Chan is a London-based poet, lecturer and editor from Hong Kong. Her debut poetry collection, Flèche(Faber & Faber), is the winner of the 2019 Costa Book Award for Poetry. Chan has twice been shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best Single Poem and is the recipient of a 2019 Eric Gregory Award and the 2018 Poetry Society Geoffrey Dearmer Prize. Chan currently lectures in Creative Writing at Oxford Brookes University. Visit her website or follow her on Twitter @maryjean_chan

Inland – Téa Obreht (Weidenfeld & Nicolson)

Tea Obreht - Inland

Nora is an unflinching frontierswoman awaiting the return of the men in her life, biding her time with her youngest son – who is convinced that a mysterious beast is stalking the land around their home – and her husband’s seventeen-year-old cousin, who communes with spirits.

Lurie is a former outlaw and a man haunted by ghosts. He sees lost souls who want something from him, and he finds reprieve from their longing in an unexpected relationship that inspires a momentous expedition across the West.

Mythical, lyrical, and sweeping in scope, Inland is grounded in true but little-known history. It showcases all of Téa Obreht’s talents as a writer, as she subverts and reimagines the myths of the American West, making them entirely – and unforgettably – her own.

About Téa Obreht

Tea Obreht credit Ilan-Harel

Téa Obreht is the author of The Tiger’s Wife, winner of the Orange Prize and a finalist for the National Book Award, and Inland. She was born in Belgrade, in the former Yugoslavia, in 1985 and has lived in the United States since the age of twelve. She currently lives in New York City. Follow her on Instagram @teaobreht.

If All the World and Love were Young – Stephen Sexton (Penguin Random House)

Stephen Sexton - If All The World And Love Were Young

When Stephen Sexton was young, video games were a way to slip through the looking glass; to be in two places at once; to be two people at once. In these poems about the death of his mother, this moving, otherworldly narrative takes us through the levels of Super Mario World, whose flowered landscapes bleed into our world, and ours, strange with loss, bleed into it. His remarkable debut is a daring exploration of memory, grief and the necessity of the unreal.

About Stephen Sexton

Stephen Sexton - credit Michael Weir

Stephen Sexton lives in Belfast where he teaches at the Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry. His first book, If All the World and Love Were Young, is forthcoming from Penguin. Follow him on Twitter @ssexton02.

On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous – Ocean Vuong (Jonathan Cape, Vintage)

Ocean Vuong - On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous

Brilliant, heart-breaking, tender, and highly original – poet Ocean Vuong’s debut novel is a sweeping and shattering portrait of a family, and a testament to the redemptive power of storytelling.

On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous is a letter from a son to a mother who cannot read. Written when the speaker, Little Dog, is in his late twenties, the letter unearths a family’s history that began before he was born – a history whose epicentre is rooted in Vietnam – and serves as a doorway into parts of his life his mother has never known, all of it leading to an unforgettable revelation. At once a witness to the fraught yet undeniable love between a single mother and her son, it is also a brutally honest exploration of race, class, and masculinity. Asking questions central to the American moment, immersed as it is in addiction, violence, and trauma, but undergirded by compassion and tenderness, On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous is as much about the power of telling one’s own story as it is about the obliterating silence of not being heard.

With stunning urgency and grace, Ocean Vuong writes of people caught between disparate worlds, and asks how we heal and rescue one another without forsaking who we are. The question of how to survive, and how to make of it a kind of joy, powers the most important debut novel of many years.

About Ocean Vuong

Ocean Vuong credit Tom Hines

Ocean Vuong is the author of the critically acclaimed poetry collection Night Sky with Exit Wounds, winner of the Whiting Award and the T.S. Eliot Prize. His writings have also been featured in The Atlantic, Harper’s, The Nation, New Republic, The New Yorker, and The New York Times. In 2019 he was awarded a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship. Born in Saigon, Vietnam, he currently lives in Northampton, Massachusetts, where he serves as an Assistant Professor of English at UMass-Amherst. On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous is his first novel. Visit his website for more information.

Lot – Bryan Washington (Atlantic Books)

Bryan Washington -Lot

Stories of a young man finding his place among family and community in Houston, from a powerful, emerging American voice.

In the city of Houston – a sprawling, diverse microcosm of America – the son of a black mother and a Latino father is coming of age. He’s working at his family’s restaurant, weathering his brother’s blows, resenting his older sister’s absence. And discovering he likes boys.

This boy and his family experience the tumult of living in the margins, the heartbreak of ghosts, and the braveries of the human heart. The stories of others living and thriving and dying across Houston’s myriad neighbourhoods are woven throughout to reveal a young woman’s affair detonating across an apartment complex, a rag-tag baseball team, a group of young hustlers, the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey, a local drug dealer who takes a Guatemalan teen under his wing, and a reluctant chupacabra.

Bryan Washington’s brilliant, viscerally drawn world leaps off the page with energy, wit, and the infinite longing of people searching for home. With soulful insight into what makes a community, a family, and a life, Lot is about love in all its unsparing and unsteady forms.

About Bryan Washington

Washington Author Photo 2020 Credit Dailey Hubbard

Bryan Washington is a National Book Award 5 Under 35 honouree and the author of the collection, Lot, and the forthcoming novel, Memorial. He has written for The New Yorker, The New York Times, the New York Times Magazine, BuzzFeed, Vulture, The Paris Review, Tin House, One Story, Bon Appétit, GQ, The Awl, and Catapult. He lives in Houston.

 

 

 

With such a feast of talent on offer this year I wouldn’t like to hazard a guess as to who will win the Swansea University Dylan Thomas Prize, but whichever of these talented young writers takes the prize, they will be a worthy winner.

We Begin At The End by Chris Whitaker

We Begin at the End

I have been desperately awaiting a new book from Chris Whitaker for far too long and am thrilled to be part of the launch celebrations of his latest novel We Begin At The End. My enormous thanks to Zaffre books for sending me a copy of We Begin At The End and to Tracy Fenton for inviting me to participate in this blog tour.

I adore Chris Whitaker’s writing. I reviewed his debut Tall Oaks here and his second novel, All The Wicked Girls, here. All The Wicked Girls was one of my Books of the Year in 2017 too.

We Begin At The End was published by Zaffre on 2nd April 2020 and is available for purchase here.

We Begin At The End

We Begin at the End

‘You can’t save someone that doesn’t want to be saved . . .’

Thirty years ago, Vincent King became a killer.

Now, he’s been released from prison and is back in his hometown of Cape Haven, California. Not everyone is pleased to see him. Like Star Radley, his ex-girlfriend, and sister of the girl he killed.

Duchess Radley, Star’s thirteen-year-old daughter, is part-carer, part-protector to her younger brother, Robin – and to her deeply troubled mother. But in trying to protect Star, Duchess inadvertently sets off a chain of events that will have tragic consequences not only for her family, but also the whole town.

Murder, revenge, retribution.

How far can we run from the past when the past seems doomed to repeat itself?

My Review of We Begin At The End

Sissy Radley’s death is just the start.

It’s no secret that I adore Chris Whitaker’s writing and will come as no surprise that I had probably unreasonably high expectations of We Begin At The End. Chris Whitaker has surpassed every one of those expectations, leaving me reeling and emotionally broken. At one point in my reading of We Begin At The End I genuinely had to pause because the tension was so great I was holding my breath and in danger of forgetting to exhale ever again. It felt akin to immersing myself in a modern day Steinbeck with the insight into human nature of Shakespeare. We Begin At The End is, quite simply, stunning.

Certainly, We Begin At The End is a flawlessly plotted crime thriller, with twists and turns that entertain and surprise, in a fast paced and totally absorbing fashion. I loved the attention to detail Chris Whitaker provides, making the landscape and setting just as much part of the story as the action. There’s a wonderful balance between the claustrophobic Cape Haven and the wider skies of Montana that is so satisfying, transporting the reader completely. It’s not possible to say too much about the plot without spoilers but I can’t remember the last time I finished a book and simply wanted to read it again immediately because I couldn’t quite believe how brilliant it was.

However, We Begin At The End is so much more than one of the best thrillers I’ve read. I’m struggling to find vocabulary that expresses just how emotional it is to read We Begin At The End and how sublimely beautiful the prose is. Frequently, pared down sentences convey such depth of exquisite meaning that is almost physically painful to read, especially with regard to Duchess. It’s no exaggeration to say that I think she might be the most affecting character I’ve ever encountered. Her relationships with the other people are so tenderly drawn and so desperately sad that I wasn’t sure I’d be able to contain myself. My heart broke for her and I lost count of the times I wept for her too.

Indeed all the characters, regardless of their actions, are depicted as real, flawed and totally believable. What Chris Whitaker manages to achieve is such a blurring of good and evil, of right and wrong, in the people of Cape Haven that I felt a tangible and palpable connection to every one of them. Walk in particular engendered such a range of responses in me as a reader from frustration and despair to admiration and pity that I felt I was no longer in control of my own reactions.

I’ve come to the conclusion that I am unable to do justice to We Begin At The End because there isn’t a superfluous character, moment or word that mars a totally fantastic narrative. It is an absolutely outstanding masterclass in perfect writing and I adored it. I’ve said elsewhere that I think Chris Whitaker’s writing touches a reader’s soul and in We Begin At The End he doesn’t merely touch that soul. He captures it entirely and doesn’t let go.

About Chris Whitaker

chris whitaker

Chris Whitaker was born in London and spent ten years working as a financial trader in the city. His debut novel, Tall Oaks, won the CWA John Creasey New Blood Dagger.

Chris’s second novel, All The Wicked Girls, was published in August 2017. He lives in Hertfordshire with his wife and two young sons.

You can follow Chris on Twitter @WhittyAuthor.

There’s more with these other bloggers too:

Chris Whitaker

An Extract from 8 1/2 Stone by Liz Jones

8 12 stone

When Martina Ticic from Midas PR got in touch to see if I’d like to be part of the launch celebrations for 8 1/ Stone by Liz Jones, I jumped at the chance and I would like to thank Martina for inviting me to participate. I am thrilled to have an extract from 8 1/2 Stone to share with you today.

Published by Matthew James, 8 1/2 Stone is available for purchase here.

8 1/2 Stone

8 12 stone

When I reach eight and a half stone:

  •  I will be able to shop in Topshop. If only I could fit in a size 10 or an 8, just walk in a shop and not even have to try it on because let’s face it I will be straight up and down, then everything would slot neatly into place, completing the easiest jigsaw puzzle in the world: all straight edges.
  • I will be able to go swimming and not displace all the water and create a tsunami.
  •  I will fit in changing rooms, without banging my elbows or exposing the moon of my arse through the curtain when I bend over.
  •  I will be able to fit behind the narrow benches at Ronnie Scott’s to listen to jazz instead of being offered a chair, at the end.
  • I will be promoted and not have my desk moved to inside the stationery cupboard.

An Extract from 8/2 Stone

Because that is what always happens after a diet. You relapse. You inflate like a hovercraft. You revert to type. You find your natural level, like Lake Victoria.

Which is why I am considering plastic surgery – after a great deal of thought and having made a list of pros and cons. Pros: I will be able to wear normal clothes, my husband might want sex with me, I might not die of a heart attack. Cons: the expense, time off work, might die. Leaps forward in technology and medical discoveries must be good for something, surely. I am thinking liposuction, and a tummy tuck to excise the strange little flap of skin that is a legacy from post-twin diet number 252. (My friend Izzy made me go to Chewton Glen in the New Forest – don’t worry, it had just been refurbed – for a week, where I was on a juice-only regimen with added boot camp and wrapped in wet bandages in a bid to rearrange my organs and reduce my equator, after a particularly invasive colonic where the therapist kept finding peas: ‘Mattar paneer,’ I told her. ‘I’m married to an Indian.’) Anyway, this skin flap is currently covering my pudenda in a generous curtain, much like the one at the Royal Opera House, only not made of red velvet. I haven’t told a soul yet that I’m considering going under The Knife, but I’m secretly browsing websites and imagining how great my new life will be.

Even on my 30th birthday night, when we returned from the sandwich bar at precisely 8.29 p.m., after my disastrous at-home spa and once Neps had lowered his eyes after raising them long enough to give me Harvey’s Bristol Cream liqueurs in a bid to give me either liver cancer or type 2 diabetes so he can at last bury me in an extra-large grave and remarry a stick insect, I had opened my own rather ancient and heavy laptop (like mother, like daughter) and started browsing websites depicting smiling supermodels who obviously never needed to go under a knife in the first place, but were still standing there, in a red, high-cut swimsuit, boobs thrust out, back curved, one knee forward, hand on non-existent hip. This could be my birthday gift to myself, to kick off a brand-new decade: major invasive surgery and anaesthetic that might just finish me off. Browsing these sites, being taken in by the promises, is exactly the same as being addicted to Rightmove.co.uk, except instead of searching for a new house, I am looking for the perfect new body to move into: downsizing, if you will. My life will be happy, once I have a utility room, a marble wet room, an eat-in kitchen and a stomach that doesn’t resemble a pair of obese buttocks. My mission, should I choose to accept it? To get down to my dream weight, a number I have not owned since I was seven.

To be eight and a half stone.

About Liz Jones

Liz Jones

Liz Jones has millions of readers across the world and was shortlisted five times in the last six years as Columnist of the Year at the British Press Awards and Columnist of the Year 2012 at the BSME awards. Liz Jones, former editor-in-chief of Marie Claire — where she ran a high profile campaign to ban skinny models — fashion editor at the Daily Mail and now columnist at the Mail on Sunday, grew up in Essex, and suffered from eating disorders from the age of 11 until her late thirties.

You can find out more on Liz’s website, by following her on Twitter @LizJonesGoddess and finding her on Facebook.

There’s more with these other bloggers too:

8 12 stone tour poster

Naked in Death by J.D. Robb

naked in death

It’s a long time since I last read Nora Roberts which was when I reviewed Come Sundown here on the blog. I have never read J.D. Robb before so when I realised Naked in Death was by Nora Roberts writing as J.D. Robb I thought I’d give it a go!

Published by Little Brown imprint Piatkus, Naked in Death is available for purchase through the links here.

Naked in Death

naked in death

Crime and punishment is Lieutenant Eve Dallas’s business. Murder her speciality. Named by the social worker who found her when she was a mere child roaming that city’s streets, Eve Dallas is a New York police detective who lives for her job. In over ten years on the force, she’s seen it all – and knows her survival depends on her instincts.

But she’s going against every warning telling her not to get involved with Roarke, a charismatic Irish billionaire – and a suspect in Eve’s latest murder investigation.

But passion and seduction have rules of their own, and it’s up to Eve to take a chance in the arms of a man she knows nothing about – except the addictive hunger of needing his touch.

My Review of Naked in Death

Eve’s latest case leads to more than police investigation.

Naked in Death is completely outside my normal reading tastes, but having been unable to concentrate on a book of late I decided to give it a try. I’m so glad I did. It’s pure escapism, hugely entertaining and completely distracting.

I found Eve perfectly named. Although Eve is not her original name, it represents the kind of woman she is revealed to be in Naked in Death, as she is both strong and vulnerable, careful and methodical but occasionally rash and always strong willed. I think any reader could identify with some facet of her character, but hopefully not the more devastating experiences she has had.

Roarke is, if I’m honest, completely cliched and yet utterly attractive. He’s rich, tall and handsome and very much a James Bond character and I think I have ended Naked in Death a little bit in love with him. I thoroughly enjoyed the mounting sexual tension between him and Eve and was actually quite surprised by some of the more explicit details of their developing relationship!

In spite of my usual preferred genres, I found the futuristic setting appealed completely. I loved the sumptuous descriptions of Roake’s home and felt very much that New York was a clear and distinct location. Whilst J.D. Robb uses transport and communication in particular to create her settings, there is a perfectly familiar grounding too, especially through the themes so that Naked in Death feels relevant and fresh as well as accessible.

And those themes are universal and pertinent. Relationships, murder, identity, abuse, corruption, violence, politics and honour all reverberate in a thrilling plot that I found transported me away from my own life into another world. I thought the title incredibly apposite too. The murder victims are indeed naked as they die, but the impact on Eve uncovers her personality, her past and a potential future for her too so that she is metaphorically naked as she investigate the deaths.

Naked in Death is exactly as it should be. It’s commercial and somewhat predictable and I thoroughly enjoyed every moment reading it. Just what I needed!

About J.D. Robb

nora roberts

Nora Roberts published her first novel using the pseudonym J.D. Robb in 1995, introducing Eve Dallas, a New York City police lieutenant with a dark past, and billionaire Irish rogue, Roarke. Since then, the In Death series has sold over sixty-six million copies, with each new novel reaching number one on bestseller charts the world over.

You will find Nora Roberts/J.D. Robb on Facebook. J.d. Robb’s website is here and Nora Roberts’ website here.

Cover Reveal: The Missing Pieces of Nancy Moon by Sarah Steele

Nancy

I was delighted when Rosie Margesson, publicity officer at Headline got in touch to ask me if I’d like to participate in the cover reveal for The Missing Pieces of Nancy Moon by Sarah Steele as it looks exactly my kind of read.

The Missing Pieces of Nancy Moon will be published by Headline on 6th August 2020 and is available for pre-order here.

Let me tell you all about it:

The Missing Pieces of Nancy Moon

Nancy

To unravel the story of that long-lost summer, she had to follow the thread…

Florence Connelly is broken-hearted; her beloved grandmother has just died and her marriage has collapsed.

But things change when she opens a box of vintage 1960s dress patterns, discovered inside her grandmother’s wardrobe. Inside each pattern packet is a fabric swatch, a postcard from Europe and a faded photograph of a young woman wearing the hand-made dress. Why did Flo’s grandmother never speak of this mysterious woman – Nancy Moon?

Her life in tatters, Flo decides to remake Nancy’s dresses, and to head across to the Continent to re-create Nancy’s Grand Tour of 1962. As she follows the thread, Flo begins to unravel an untold story of love and loss in her family’s past. And perhaps to stitch the pieces of her own life back together…

Doesn’t that sound just gorgeous? I’m so looking forward to reading The Missing Pieces of Nancy Moon.

cover-reveal

About Sarah Steele

sarah steele

Sarah Steele trained as a classical pianist and violinist in London, before joining the world of publishing as an assistant at Hodder and Stoughton. She was then for many years a freelance editor, She now lives in Stroud and in 2018 was the director of Wordfest at Gloucester Cathedral, which culminated in a suffragette march led by Helen Pankhurst.

The Missing Pieces of Nancy Moon is her debut novel.

You can follow Sarah on Twitter @sarah_l_steele.

Daisy by J P Henderson

Daisy Cover

Several months ago a surprise copy of Daisy by J P Henderson dropped through my letterbox and so when I was invited to participate in the launch celebrations by Anne at Random Things Tours it looked like the prefect opportunity to bump Daisy up my TBR. I’m delighted to share my review today.

Published by No Exit Press, on 23rd April 2020, Daisy is available for purchase here.

Daisy

Daisy Cover

MEET DAISY. A PICTURE OF GRACE AND DIGNITY.

MEET HEROD. A… DISAPPOINTMENT

Written in his own words, and guided by a man who collects glasses in a local pub, this is the story of Herod ‘Rod’ Pinkney’s search for Daisy Lamprich, a young woman he first sees on a decade-old episode of the Judge Judy Show, and who he now intends to marry.

When Daisy is located in the coastal city of Huntington Beach, California, he travels there with his good friend and next-door neighbour, Donald, a man who once fought in the tunnels of Cu Chi during the Vietnam War and who now spends most of his time in Herod’s basement.

Herod is confident that the outcome will be favourable, but there’s a problem… Will the course of true love ever run smoothly for this unlikely hero?

Daisy is a funny and touching story of an improbable and heart-warming quest to find true love.

My Review of Daisy

Herod ‘Rod’ Pinkney is writing a book about his quest for love.

Daisy is a lovely book. I thoroughly enjoyed immersing myself into Rod’s world, not least because the first person narrative has such a distinct voice that I felt as if I knew Rod personally. I knew Daisy was going to appeal to me from the very beginning as I had laughed aloud several times at Rod’s comments within a very few pages of the book and that rarely happens when I read. He has a human persona that feels very real.

There’s a smashing plot here because J P Henderson balances major events alongside the minutiae of Rod’s ordinary life with a dry witticism and perfect eye for detail so that I could picture the people, places and events describe with crystal clear vision. I found myself reading with a smile on my face throughout and it obviously impacted on me as I had a dream about guinea pigs, but you’ll have to read the book to see how that experience was prompted! The senses are so well catered for in this vivid writing, especially through food which features frequently.

Although Daisy is light entertainment at its best, that’s not to say that there aren’t some more sombre issues hidden in this hugely entertaining story. Rod’s attempt to find God, his relationships with his parents, Donald’s marriage and war history, Edmundo’s shady past, attitudes towards others in society concerning gender, race, appearance and so on all weave through the pages making for considerable interest as well as light relief.

I feel J P Henderson has created a microcosm of the world in Rod’s life so that Daisy can be read on many different levels. The book can be enjoyed as a simple amusement, but it can also be considered at greater depth so that it is thought provoking too. However you might like to read Daisy, I can really recommend that you do as it’s a smashing book.

About J P Henderson

JPHenderson Author Pic

J P HENDERSON is the author of three previous novels including Last Bus to Coffeeville, which was selected for World Book Night and longlisted for the Dublin Literary Award.

By nature an internationalist, he lives in a cul-de-sac in West Yorkshire for practical reasons.

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FINAL Daisy BT Poster

The House at Silvermoor by Tracy Rees

The House at Silvermoor

I love Tracy Rees, both as a person and as a novelist, so when she asked if I’d like to read her latest book, The House at Silvermoor, I was completely thrilled. My enormous thanks to Emma Capron at Quercus for sending me a copy in return for an honest review.

I’ve met Tracy several times, and she has been a regular on Linda’s Book Bag. Amy Snow was one of the first books I ever reviewed on the blog here. I reviewed Florence Grace here and had a wonderful guest post from Tracy about the appeal of the C19th that you can read hereFlorence Grace was one of my Books of the Year in 2016 and you’ll see it featured here. I also reviewed Tracy’s The Hourglass here and Tracy was kind enough to provide a guest post all about her memories of Richmond when Darling Blue was published. Sadly I haven’t managed to read Darling Blue yet!

The House at Silvermoor was released by Quercus in paperback on 2nd April 2020 and is available for purchase in all formats through the links here.

The House at Silvermoor

The House at Silvermoor

England, 1899. A new century is dawning, and two young friends are about to enter into a world of money, privilege and family secrets…

Josie has never questioned her life in a South Yorkshire mining village. But everything changes when she meets Tommy from the neighbouring village. Tommy has been destined for a life underground since the moment he was born. But he has far bigger dreams for his future.

United by their desire for something better and by their fascination with the local gentry, Josie and Tommy become fast friends. Wealthy and glamorous, the Sedgewicks of Silvermoor inhabit a world that is utterly forbidden to Tommy and Josie. Yet as the new century arrives, the pair become entangled with the grand family, and discover a long hidden secret.

Will everything change as they all step forward into the new dawn…?

My Review of The House at Silvermoor

Events will test Tommy and Josie’s friendship over the years.

I truly loved The House at Silvermoor because I was completely transported back in time to an era so perfectly portrayed it was as if I were there, living alongside Tommy and Josie. The social history of the turn of the century, the setting and the daily lives of those at the lowest rung of society’s ladder are woven into the narrative by Tracy Rees just beautifully. Her elegant prose has a tone perfect for the era and although it isn’t really the correct word to use in a reading context, I kept thinking of mellifluous as I read The House at Silvermoor. The writing felt smooth, silken and somehow tender so that I was completely invested in the story. That said, the naturalistic direct speech balanced the richness so flawlessly because it was thoroughly realistic, making the characters come alive and enhancing the reader’s understanding of their position in the world.

As a result of the beautiful quality of the writing I was swept along in the story. Several times I exclaimed aloud, terrified for the consequences of a particular aspect of the plot or heartened by another element. I shed a tear and cheered at different parts of the story too because I became so invested in the people. I think it illustrates just how enraptured I was by Tommy and Josie et al, that the morning after I had finished The House at Silvermoor, I woke up and wondered how they all were, before reminding myself that they were not real people but characters in a novel.

And what characters they are. I thought the way they represented the different strata of society so distinctly, whilst simultaneously illustrating how positive and negative behaviours, love and hate, jealousy and generosity, fear and courage permeate all levels, was inspired. The sense of longing and identity that reverberates through Tommy and Josie is so affecting because Tracy Rees shows just how chance and circumstance can have a profound effect on who we are and what we can achieve, but that ambition and dreams are relevant to all. At times, the hand fate dealt Tommy and Josie was utterly heartbreaking and I came to care about them deeply.

I thought The House at Silvermoor was a perfect example of a sweeping, expansive tale that transports the reader so completely to another time and place. It held me spellbound and I loved every moment of reading it. Wonderful stuff.

About Tracy Rees

Tracy Rees

Born in Wales, Tracy Rees has been called “the most outstanding new voice in historical fiction” by Lucinda Riley and her books are paperback and kindle bestsellers. She was the winner of the Richard and Judy ‘Search for a Bestseller’ Competition. A Cambridge graduate, she had a successful eight-year career in nonfiction publishing and a second career practising and teaching humanistic counselling before becoming a writer.

You can follow Tracy on Twitter @AuthorTracyRees or visit her website for more information.