An Extract from The Shadows of Rutherford House by C E Rose

I’m feeling sorry for myself! You see, I desperately wanted to read The Shadows of Rutherford House by CE Rose as I have loved her writing under other pen names (see here) but I simply couldn’t fit it in in time to participate in the blog tour. However, I’m delighted to have the Prologue from The Shadows of Rutherford House to share with you today – even if it has made me think I’m missing out even more.

Published by Hera on 10th November 2022 The Shadows of Rutherford House is available for purchase through the links here.

The Shadows of Rutherford House

Darkness lies at the heart of this family…

In 1959 Milly starts her new life as a housemaid at Rutherford House, working for the aristocratic Rutherford-Percy clan. Entranced by her new mistress, Vivienne, she becomes deeply embroiled in the household and the keeper of dark secrets the family conceals beneath the mansion’s grand exterior.

In the present day, Christie is working as a psychiatric nurse when she meets troubled patient Lillian Percy, Vivienne’s granddaughter and heiress to Rutherford House. They soon bond over the loss of their mothers
– Lillian’s died when she was a child; Christie’s mysteriously disappeared over twenty years ago – and Christie finds herself increasingly fascinated by
Lillian’s family and their imposing ancestral home.

As Christie learns more about the Rutherford-Percys, she finds a shocking clue that could help her uncover what happened to her own mother. Desperate for answers, Christie puts her job, her family and even her very life on the line. But how much of the truth does she really want to know?

A twisty, chilling and unputdownable page-turner about family secrets, perfect for fans of Kate Morton, Louise Douglas and Harriet Evans.

An Extract from The Shadows of Rutherford House

Prologue

Present Day

It’s heavily raining tonight, the wind whipping the windows behind the closed shutters. As ever, the midnight darkness is inky black, but that makes no odds to me. I know every inch, nook and cranny of this old manor like the back of my hand; even with my eyes closed, I could find each remnant of its former glory in seconds, the oil paintings depicting the haughty Percy line, the exquisitely shaped standard lamps, the Romanesque pillars and busts, the ornate marble hearths, brass grates and antique fire tools.

It wouldn’t be appropriate to be seen wandering Rutherford House as though I owned it, so I like this quiet time to explore the ancient corridors and chambers, to take in the aromas, the textures and vibrations, and tonight is no exception. I trace my fingers along the walls and feel the nap of velvet wallpaper, ridges of stucco trim and knots in fine hardwood. The panelling hasn’t been polished for years, and yet I know each room’s distinctive, waxy smell. I know which floorboards creak, which chairs have broken springs, which handsome tables have woodworm, the crystals missing from the showy chandeliers, the locks and latches which no longer work.

Remembering a spring ball I once watched from the wings, I dance across the marbled floor of the domed hallway. The worn carpet of the sweeping staircase is rough beneath my toes, yet it still has the elegance, the grandeur of the past, especially when I pause to listen to the rock ’n’ roll echoing from the dance floor below. Humming at the memory, I sashay up the steps, and when I reach the open landing, I stop again to new noises which pierce the silence. Babies, of course, the joyful bleats and shuffles of all the newborns brought into the world under this very roof. I brush by the balustrade and make my way through the shadows towards the warmth and the sound, but as ever, a hand slips into mine, insubstantial but undoubtedly there. And though I long to turn back the clock and wipe out my one and only guilt, history can’t be changed, so I pull away and cover my ears to block out the inevitable.

Yet I still hear it. A thud and the crack of broken bones.

****

Crikey! That’s some prologue! I can’t wait to read The Shadows of Rutherford House.

About CE Rose

CE Rose is the pen name of Caroline England, the author of psychological thrillers Beneath the Skin, My Husband’s Lies, Betray Her and Truth Games. As CE Rose, Caroline has written gothic-tinged domestic suspense novels, The House of Hidden Secrets and The House on the Water’s Edge. As Caro Land she has written the legal suspense drama series, Convictions and Confessions.

To find out more you can follow Caroline on Twitter @CazEngland and find her on Instagram and  Facebook or visit her website.

There’s more with these other bloggers too:

Featuring LoveMyRead (@lovemyread) thanks to FMcM Associates (@FMcMAssociates)

I was absolutely thrilled recently to be given a gift subscription to LoveMyRead by lovely Rhiannon at FMcM Associates, the books PR agency, so that I could find out for myself just what a fantastic present these monthly boxes make. I am enormously grateful for the opportunity. I chose a fiction subscription.

Yesterday my first box arrived with delivery tracked by the Royal Mail and with updates so that I knew it was on its way. I have to admit, I wasn’t expecting it to be as lovely as it is!

I struggled to take a picture of the whole box contents as you can see:

The box itself was lovely, but the contents even better. I had chosen The Awakenings by Sarah Maine as the book I wanted but I didn’t realise quite what extra treats would come with it. The monthly book choices are from recent releases.

My Book Choice

The Awakenings

A grieving woman . . .
Yorkshire, 1890. Forced to exchange her childhood home for her uncle’s vicarage after a tragic loss, Olwen Malkon finds herself trapped between her aunt’s cruelty and the sinister advances of her cousin.

A troubled past . . .
When Olwen finds herself afflicted by strange dreams of a woman from a distant past, whose fate is overshadowed by menace and betrayal, those around her are determined to dismiss them as hysteria – except the local doctor, John, with whom she develops a connection.

A long-buried secret . . .
As the visions intensify, they begin to mirror reality, threatening to expose chilling secrets. What dangers lie ahead for Olwen, and does the past hold the key to her own future…?

The Awakenings was published in paperback by Hodder on 3rd November 2022.

****

The Extras

The box smelt lovely as I opened it and that was because tucked inside was a lovely, ethically made, hand blended and poured IRUSU candle.

Also included was a beautiful LoveMyRead bookmark with an information leaflet (that also had a wordsearch on the back as an extra entertaining touch).

Even better, as anyone who knows me would appreciate, there was tea and chocolate as well as a bean snack! The tea came from Tea and Tonic whose lovely website you’ll find here and where I discovered there are all kinds of lovely beauty products. Now, in my mind, it should be illegal to have tea without chocolate and so LoveMyRead served me well here!

I received a Gnaw Chocolate mint hot chocolate shot, a bar of HappiChoc dairy free and vegan milk chocolate and another of salted caramel and then a packet of vegan friendly roasted fava beans from The Honest Bean Co.

This is my first experience of LoveMyRead and it was absolutely brilliant. I’d have no hesitation in recommending their boxes as a wonderful gift. You can choose 3 months, 6 months or a year and you can always skip a month if no books appeal (though I can’t see that happening – my difficulty was choosing just one!).

You’ll forgive my photography but if you would like to see what boxes look like when someone with skills takes the image then these will give you an idea:

You can find out all about LoveMyRead gift subscriptions by visiting the website, following LoveMyRead on Twitter @LoveMyRead or finding them on Facebook and Instagram.

****

I would just like to extend my thanks again to FMcM for giving me this opportunity. It’s brilliant!

Staying in with Ray Rumsby

It’s a funny old world isn’t it? My guest today got in touch through my school A’Level French teacher of over 40 years ago! It’s a pleasure to welcome Ray Rumsby to the blog to tell me about his book as I have it on my TBR and think it sounds amazing.

Staying in with Ray Rumsby

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

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

I’ve brought my novel, The Prentice-Boy. It was published by Claret Press in October 2022. I’d spent six years in writing and re-writing my story, at different stages asking various people to read what I’d done, and to make suggestions. It’s a matter of getting the book as ‘right’ as possible, so readers can enjoy it, and that’s why I’ve brought it, Linda.

It sounds like a labour of love. What can we expect from an evening in with The Prentice-Boy?

Well, the book has two central characters, rather than one – two closely-connected lives to follow; two ways of seeing the world; two different voices describing what happens; and by the end of the story, I hope that readers will want to know the outcome for each of them. Actually, double-ness threads its way through the whole book – reflections, shadows, colours changing in a different light, deceptive appearances, concealment, and lies. I became very interested in that idea.

That sounds fascinating. Did writing it that way impact on you?

It helped me to explore how we as individuals can sometimes believe things about past national events, or details of our own family history, which later turn out to be quite false. Of course, once discovered, these matters can’t easily be ignored. There are consequences. They change us in some way: statues can be torn down, friendships ended. To use the eyes and thoughts of a middle-aged artist and of his apprentice seemed a good way to present ‘what happens afterwards’, as well as well as those moments of finding-out – for them both. That was tricky!

I bet! Tell me a bit about the two main characters.

Though William is a perceptive, skilled artist, in social life he misreads situations catastrophically. By contrast, young Jesse is street-wise, but as a workhouse foundling has never known family life, and as an apprentice depends entirely upon the Master’s will. Their partnership, travels together, artistic endeavours and mutual influence, are the double-act which carries the humour and the pathos in this book.

What about the era The Prentice-Boy is set in?

The Prentice-Boy is set two centuries ago, three years after Jane Austen died and five years after the Battle of Waterloo. However, what led me to write the book in this way were political and social events in 2016, Brexit year, and what has happened since. One purpose in looking back can be to help us understand society now, to consider how our lives, and the choices we make, also have consequences in future.

Sadly I’m not sure we learn much from history Ray. It seems to have a nasty habit of repeating itself.

What else have you brought along and why have you brought it?

Along with The Guardian, some tofu, and my Woke tee-shirt – all carried in a Remoaner tote bag – I’ve brought a 2020 image of an indie bookshop:

Ha! I have a feeling that photo might be taken in Kett’s Book Ray! Thanks so much for staying in with me to chat about The Prentice-Boy. I hope it’s not too long before it reaches the top of my TBR as I think it sounds fantastic. 

The Prentice-Boy

In 1820 London, landscape artist William Daniell hires Jesse Cloud, a homeless teenager, to be his apprentice. But all is not as it seems. Both William and his prentice must make their own inner journeys to expose others’ betrayals and explore their own possibilities. Faced with bankruptcy, starvation looms. Friendships fragment. The artist must learn how to see and his prentice must learn how to survive – while the truth shatters all.

The powerlessness of the poor and women’s suffrage are a constant presence tainting the air. This troubled period of change and division provides a vivid sense of time and place.

William’s casual assumptions about the poor in society and about women in particular challenges his very identity. An accident-prone venture to remote East Anglian shores becomes a journey of revelation and self-discovery as long-hidden truths about their backgrounds begin to unravel, and the secretive nature of the prentice-boy gains sudden significance.

William’s camera obscura captures an insecure society of inequality and flux. Two centuries later it is uncannily familiar and resonates deeply.

The Prentice-Boy was published by Claret Press on 6th October 2022 and is available for purchase through the links here.

About Ray Rumsby

Following a successful career in education and training, Ray Rumsby turned his attention to campaigning and theatre, and his play about the life and work of poet George Crabbe sparked the idea for his first novel. Crabbe’s 1810 poem Peter Grimes tells the tragic story of three apprentices ‘farmed out’ from a London workhouse. This led to the creation of Jesse Cloud, a homeless teenager fleeing the workhouse and one of the central characters of The Prentice-Boy.

Ray has also written several articles for academic journals and his work for a national charity led to a PhD. In 2013 Ray began a campaign to rescue a local bookshop scheduled for closure. A group of volunteers formed a new, not-for-profit community bookshop, and Kett’s Books has evolved successfully ever since.

Grandma Grandma Brave and Tall by Antoinette Brooks

I’m always keen to review children’s books and when Antoinette Brooks got in touch about her latest book Grandma Grandma Brave and Tall I was delighted to accept a copy for review. It’s a pleasure to share that review today.

Grandma Grandma Brave and Tall was published on 15th October 2022 and is available for purchase here.

A heartwarming children’s rhyming book full of adventure, positivity, and an amazing relationship between a grandma and grandchild! Perfect for bedtime reading and for early learners looking for adventure!

“Grandma, grandma

Brave and tall,

Tell me a story

Of when you were small…”

It’s nighttime.

A little girl lies tucked up safely in bed, but grandma is there and she’s too excited to go to sleep just yet! Can she persuade her beloved grandmother to tell her a bedtime story? Not any old story, but a tale of when grandma was a little girl too!

A wonderful tale that starts with grandma as a small child in Jamaica before she makes a long journey over the ocean… but this is only the beginning, and the little girl hears far more stories than she ever thought possible.

Inspired by true stories from the author’s family, Grandma, Grandma, Brave and Tall is a beautiful storybook that celebrates everyday resilience, overcoming adversity and the power that can be found in intergenerational family bonds.

This wonderful book is packed with:

  • Beautiful rhyming text that adds joy and rhythm to the story
  • Diverse characters which help children feel they have a valid place in the world
  • Sensitive portrayals of real historical events which show triumph over adversity

Children will love the joyful rhyming prose and beautiful vibrant illustrations of Caribbean life, in this wonderful tribute to the abiding love between grandmother and grandchild from one generation to another.

My Review of Grandma, Grandma Brave and Tall

A bedtime story spanning generations.

Before I review the actual story in Grandma Grandma Brave and Tall I just want to mention the extra elements that I so enjoyed. There’s a letter to the reader from the author Antoinette Brooks that feels inclusive and sets the scene for the narrative. There are extra resources to go alongside the book on the author’s website, making it very good value for money and I absolutely loved the way the acknowledgements are presented in a circle that represents the circle of family, storytelling and life that fits the book so well.

I thought Grandma Grandma Brave and Tall was just lovely. Firstly it was an absolute joy to have a children’s book where caucasian characters are in the minority. They are included, but status and prominence is given to those with a Jamaican background that is perfect for today’s multi-ethnic homes and educational settings.

There’s a real sense of history, geography and heritage as stories swirl around events like hurricanes, freedom and conflict as well as family and friends. I thought that having strong women at the heart of the stories too was inspired as it gives children the understanding that females are vital and important in the world.

It was inspirational to encourage children to share their stories with others at the end of the book and I thought this was a message for adults as well as young children. Too often we hear others bewailing the fact that they didn’t listen to the tales from the older generations of their family and, once it’s too late, wish they had.

The rhyming presentation makes Grandma Grandma Brave and Tall accessible to children and easier for adults to read aloud and the illustrations are perfect for the target audience. They retain a child-like quality whilst also being mature and unpatronising so that they add a sensation of quality to the book.

Grandma Grandma Brave and Tall is suffused with connection, belonging and family love. I thought it was lovely.

About Antoinette Brooks

 

Antoinette Brooks loved creating stories and scribbling pictures from an early age.

She studied Economics at university before realising she was a hopeless economist who did not care for maths or figures, and much preferred words and pictures instead.

She was inspired to tell stories by her mother. “My parents came from rural Jamaica and I loved hearing the stories my mother and aunt shared with me about growing up. Those were wonderful days and times. I treasure all those memories, and now it is my joy to share my own stories with you!’

Antoinette loves to share her favourite books and hear from her readers.

You can find out more by visiting Antoinette’s website, finding her on Instagram or following her on Twitter @MissBLovesBooks.

Staying in with John Winn Miller

I adore history and as a result am delighted that I get to stay in with John Win Miller today to find out all about his debut novel which I think sounds amazing. Let’s dive right in (and I say dive deliberately!) and find out what he told me:

Staying in with John Winn Miller

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

Thanks for inviting me in.

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

 

I’ve brought The Hunt for the Peggy C, my debut novel, because it is my dream project—literally. Years ago, I had been watching a terrible movie with my daughter Allison (who now plays Maggie on ABC’s A Million Little Things), and I kept telling her, “I know I can write a better script than this.” That night I had a dream. When I awoke the next day, I knew the first scene, the last scene, and the name of the ship. Nothing else.

Crikey! That’s a bit spooky, tell me more.

I had a regular job as a newspaper editor, so I could only work on the screenplay intermittently. When I retired the first time (a.k.a. took a buyout as publisher), I was determined to write the story. I took a video course, read books on writing scripts, and submitted various drafts to coverage companies and contests. I got some meetings in Hollywood, but no sale. So, I put the script aside, worked on other screenplays and a TV pilot, and produced four indie movies.

You weren’t idle during that time then!

When Covid hit, and my wife Margo and I were stuck at home with our cat and two standard poodles, I decided to turn the screenplay into a novel. After all, I had become a journalist because I wanted to write the great American novel. But I didn’t know how to write, and I had no exciting experiences to write about. Being an investigative reporter and foreign correspondent checked those boxes. Writing a novel, however, is completely different from writing a news story or a screenplay, which I think is more like haiku with short descriptions and little dialogue.

That’s so interesting. I sometimes think there’s an opinion that anyone can write a novel.

So, once again, I took a course on novel writing, read a million books on writing, watched videos, and jumped in. Seven months later, I had a first draft of what would become The Hunt for the Peggy C, a World War II maritime thriller.

Did you find it challenging?

What made this so unusual for me is that I have never been on a U-boat or a tramp steamer, and I knew next to nothing about the sea. So, I had to do tons of research because I wanted all the history and technical details (and there are lots) to be accurate. The problem was that I so enjoyed the research that I kept going down rabbit holes chasing more information, saying to myself, “What? I didn’t know that?” I was lucky to have a couple of former submarine officers check my work.

Ha! So many authors tell me that the research can become all consuming. So, what can we expect from an evening in with The Hunt for the Peggy C?

The Hunt for the Peggy Cis a World War II-era historical fiction that could be described as Casablanca meets Das Boot because it is really a love story wrapped in an action-adventure.

That’s a great elevator pitch!

It’s about an American fugitive who struggles to rescue a Jewish family on his rusty cargo ship, outraging his mutinous crew of misfits and provoking a hair-raising chase by an unstable Nazi U-boat captain bent on revenge.

Rumor has it that Captain Jake Rogers, a gruff U.S. Naval Academy dropout, fled America because of a murder. Now, in the days before America entered World War II, Jake scrounges for cargo to smuggle on his decrepit merchant ship. In Nazi-occupied Amsterdam, he takes on his most dangerous load yet – a Jewish family he’s never met.

During the nerve-wracking 3,000-mile escape through naval battles, minefields, and horrendous weather, Jake’s ship struggles to outrun a U-boat commanded by Oberleutnant Viktor Brauer, an ardent Nazi who believes he is doing God’s will. The increasingly unhinged commander knows his shaky career is finished unless he rescues his kidnapped boarding party from Jake.

As the chase intensifies, Jake falls in love with the family’s eldest daughter Miriam, a sweet medical student with a militant streak who constantly challenges Jake to change his mercenary ways.

Everything seems hopeless when Jake is badly wounded, and Miriam must prove she’s as tough as her rhetoric to put down a mutiny by some of Jake’s fed-up crew of misfits — just as the U-boat closes in for the kill.

That sounds quite an adventure.

During the voyage, readers will experience the gritty world of tramp steamers and their less-than-reputable crews plying dangerous war zones in search of cargo and life inside overcrowded, smelly, and deadly U-boats. The Peggy C’s voyage takes readers from inside Nazi-occupied Amsterdam, where they will witness the ever-more-oppressive treatment of Jews, to the perilous English Channel, to Gibraltar, where Jews have been protected by the British for centuries, to a hospital in Majorca, through a minefield near Malta and then almost to Palestine, where the final confrontation takes place. Along the way, I slip in little-known titbits of history. As one author said, The Hunt for the Peggy C entertains and educates at the same time.

The Hunt for the Peggy C sounds like my kind of read. what have readers thought about it?

Robin Hutton, author of the N.Y. Times bestseller Sgt. Reckless: America’s War Horse, sums up most readers’ reaction: “I was on the edge of my seat reading it! I highly recommend this book!”

“A brilliantly researched and superbly plotted adventure story,” was how reviewer Kevin Cannon described it on Reedy Discovery.

Readers also seem to like it. One compared it to Kristen Hannah’s The Nightingale. Others called it “fantastic,” “a must-read,” and “five out of five stars.”

You must be totally thrilled with those responses John.

What else have you brought along and why have you brought it?

I’ve prepared a delicious dinner from foods featured in my novel that sailors and people in occupied Europe were forced to eat. Because everything was rationed–and the Nazis confiscated all the best produce, meat, and other foodstuffs–everyone had to improvise.

Sounds… delicious or do I mean revolting!

We’ll start with what was known in Holland as “surrogate coffee” and in France as café Petain. The formula varied depending on what was available, but it could be made of a weak concoction of chicory, ground acorns, roasted barley, or other ground grains. It could be sweetened with saccharine and condensed milk, if available. Sugar rarely was.

Thankfully I don’t drink coffee so I’ll just have hot water.

Next up is potage paysanne, a traditionally rich peasant’s soup in France loaded with vegetables that, because of rationing, is now largely carrots and water. Almost everything was made with carrots. Even when rare items like eggs were available, they were too expensive for most people, whose wages were frozen early in the war amid raging inflation. On the black market, eggs were triple the official price.

The soup will be followed by a watery rabbit stew with rutabaga­–despised and primarily served to livestock–substituting for hard-to-find potatoes and nettles substituting for spinach.

We call rutabaga turnips in the UK but it doesn’t make them taste any better!

For dessert, we’ll be serving . . . nothing.

Ah, well. I could do with losing a pound or two…

I know you don’t like wine, which was abundant, so we’ll end the meal with a digestif of Armagnac de Montal 1940, a rich brandy from Gascony; the Germans priced it officially at around fifty-seven francs, but a single bottle sold for as much as 350 francs on the black market, nearly four days’ salary for French coal miners, among the highest paid laborers.

Now you know why a French adult’s average daily consumption dropped from 2,500 calories before the war to less than half that during the war.

I think many of us consume that many calories in a snack these days John! I’m not much of a drinker but I’ll join you in a class of Armagnac thank you.

Sailors on American merchant ships ate somewhat better food, although there was a lot of pumpkin and moldy meat that often had to be washed off with Condy’s Fluid, a disinfectant. Water was strictly rationed.

By comparison, U-boat sailors ate like kings. Although fresh meat and produce only lasted a couple of weeks, the 45-member crews had better-canned food, bread, and root vegetables than most Germans. The U-boats were jam-packed with food before voyages, with dried meats and bags of potatoes and bread loaves hanging from the ceiling, onions and vegetables stored under bunks and so many cans of food that one of two heads was rarely available.

After each meal, Smutje, as cooks were called on German ships, had to measure consumption so the remaining food could be moved around the U-boat to maintain the ship’s balance.

Duty stewards served the Lords, as the enlisted men were known, from a “long boat,” a deep, bucket-shaped container. There was no mess for them, so they always ate at their stations or bunks on small, collapsible wooden tables lined with racks called Fiddles that kept the food from falling off.

The officers ate in a separate midsection wardroom between the listening room and the galley on a folding table in the aisle while sitting on the lower bunks. The walls around them were lined with small lockers for storage of personal items and covered with a veneer of varnished wood, a homey touch amid all the steel.

That is absolutely fascinating. Thanks so much for staying in with me to chat about your research and The Hunt for Peggy C John. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed it. 

Thank you, Linda.

THE HUNT FOR THE PEGGY C:  A World War II Maritime Thriller

Captain Jake Rogers, experienced in running his tramp steamer through U-boat infested waters to transport vital supplies and contraband to the highest bidder, takes on his most dangerous cargo yet after witnessing the oppression of Jews in Amsterdam: a Jewish family fleeing Nazi persecution.

The normally aloof Rogers finds himself drawn in by the family’s warmth and faith, but he can’t afford to let his guard down when  Oberleutnant Viktor Brauer, a brutal U-boat captain, sets his sights on the  Peggy C. Rogers finds himself pushed to the limits of his ingenuity as he evades Brauer’s relentless stalking, faces a mutiny among his own crew, and grapples with his newfound feelings for Miriam, the young Jewish woman whom, along with her family, he must transport to safety.

The Hunt for Peggy C is available for purchase here.

About John Win Miller

John Winn Miller is an award-winning investigative reporter, foreign correspondent, editor, newspaper publisher, screenwriter, movie producer, and novelist. The Lexington, Ky., native was a foreign correspondent for The Associated Press and Wall Street Journal/Europe based in Rome, Italy; a reporter and editor at the Lexington (KY) Herald-Leader; executive editor of the Centre Daily Times (State College, Pa.) and the Tallahassee Democrat; and was publisher of The Olympian in Olympia, WA., and The Concord (N.H.) Monitor. He also helped produce four independent feature films: “Hitting the Cycle” with Bruce Dern; “Armed Response”; “Band of Robbers,” written and directed by Adam and Aaron Nee, and “Ghost in the Family.” Miller and his wife Margo live in Lexington. Their daughter Allison Miller is an actress-screenwriter-director currently starring on the ABC series “A Million Little Things.”

For further information, visit John’s website, find him on Instagram and Facebook or follow him on Twitter @WinnAuthor

Celebrating #ReadingWell with @ReadingAgency

I had intended to feature the Reading Agency’s Reading Well campaign over a month ago on 10th October, but sadly, and a little ironically, life got the better of me.

As someone who used to teach English 11-18 year olds I know only too well the way books can be a support to those whose lives are less than perfect or those who suffer mental health problems. Indeed, when my own mental health is feeling fragile, books can be the balm I need to reset my equilibrium.

What is Reading Well?

Reading Well has been developed by national charity The Reading Agency in partnership with Libraries Connected and the Society of Chief Librarians (SCL) Cymru, and is delivered with public libraries. There are 5 Reading Well booklists which support people to understand and manage their health and wellbeing using helpful reading. Over 3 million Reading Well books have been borrowed from libraries since 2013. Find out about other Reading Well booklists at your local library or visit readingwell.org.uk.

Reading Well for Teens

Reading Well for teens supports the mental health and wellbeing of teenagers, providing helpful information, advice and support to help them better understand their feelings, handle difficult experiences and boost confidence. The list has been developed as an update to the 2016 Reading Well for Young People (“Shelf Help”) list and is focused on supporting teens’ mental health and wellbeing in a post-pandemic context.

The booklist is targeted at teenagers (13-18) and includes a range of reading levels and formats to support less confident readers and encourage engagement. Some of the recommended books suggest useful self-help techniques; there are also personal stories, graphic formats, and fiction.

Alongside the books are a selection of quality assured age-appropriate digital resources. The books have been chosen by young people, leading health professionals and library staff.

The book selection panel included colleagues from Royal College of GPs, Royal College of Psychiatrists, Royal College of Nursing, British Psychological Society, British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy, NHS England, Mind, Anna Freud National Centre for Children and Families and the School Library Association.

The new Reading Well for teens booklist launched nationally on 10th October 2022 on World Mental Health Day.

About The Reading Agency

The Reading Agency is a national charity helping people to tackle life’s big challenges through the proven power of reading to deliver a world where everyone is reading their way to a better life.

You can find out more by visiting their website, following them on Twitter @readingagency or Instagram and finding them on Facebook.

The Un-Family by Linda Huber

Although I’ve met lovely Linda Huber, and she’s featured several times on Linda’s Book Bag in posts you’ll find here, I’ve never actually got round to reading one of her books before so when Hobeck‘s Rebecca Collins got in touch to see if I’d like to participate in the blog tour for Linda’s The Un-Family, I jumped at the chance. Thanks to Rebecca for sending me a copy of The Un-Family in return for an honest review which I’m delighted to share today to start off the tour.

The Un-Family is published tomorrow, 15th November 2022 by Hobeck and is available for purchase here.

The Un-Family

For better, for worse

Wildlife vet Holly’s life seems blissful: husband Dylan is the man of her dreams, she has a rewarding career and a lovely home. And yet, a tiny niggle is growing daily. Dylan is becoming increasingly remote – but why? Holly is determined to mend the fissure in their relationship. But a shocking discovery changes everything…

Family ties

Then there’s Dylan’s family: his wayward twin Seth and their widowed mother Elaine, who is rather fond of a glass or two of sherry. Nothing in Elaine’s life is easy, bringing up teenage granddaughter Megan while the family grieves the loss of Megan’s mother.

Family lies

A tragic event rocks the foundations of the family, and Holly’s life starts to unravel. Dylan drifts ever further away. Megan is left uncertain and alone, while Seth falls deeper into himself.

The bonds that once bound the family together are breaking. Can they ever be repaired?

My Review of The Un-Family

Holly and Dylan’s relationship is under strain.

The Un-Family starts and ends in dramatic fashion that I found both exciting and engaging, but it is the bulk of the story where action is less fast paced that is so fascinating because Linda Huber explores the psychology of family and relationships with absolute authority. She made me rage as I wanted Holly to be more assertive in her marriage to Dylan to the extent that I was ready to climb into the pages and shake her until her teeth rattled and yet I understood completely her hesitance, her desperation for her marriage to work and her reluctance to upset an obviously volatile man.

The reasons for Dylan’s volatility are gradually uncovered in an intelligent and well structured narrative that builds his character through a dual timescale illustrating his relationship with his twin Seth and his mother. The Un-Family is a vivid insight into nature versus nurture as well as into rationality and revenge that makes it actually quite chilling.

All the characters in The Un-Family are multi-layered and complex but realistic and authentic. I was especially impressed by Megan because I often find teenage characters too young or too old for their chronological age in fiction. Here Megan is pitch perfect. I loved the way she is also often the unwitting catalyst for action because through her Linda Huber illustrates how life can turn in an instant. The author gives credibility and status to Megan that feels respectful and real.

The themes of The Un-Family are equally multi-layered and complex. Certainly there is family upbringing and its impact on individuals at the heart of the story, but also an exploration of what family actually is. As a result of the narrative the reader comes to understand that family may not be those with whom we share a genetic link. In addition, the story contemplates love, addiction, obsession and trust so that I found myself thinking about its themes after I’d finished reading.

I found The Un-Family interesting, entertaining and thought provoking. Mind you, I won’t be taking up kayaking but you’ll need to read The Un-Family to find out why!

About Linda Huber

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Linda Huber is an ex-physiotherapist who grew up in Glasgow but has lived over half her life in Switzerland, where she writes psychological suspense novels as Linda Huber as well as feel-good novellas under her pen name Melinda Huber.

Linda has been writing since she was a child, getting inspiration from everyday events and conversation and always asking: What If?

The inspiration for her books comes from everyday life – a family member’s struggle with dementia, the discovery that a child in her extended family drowned in the 1940s, and more.

She is currently enjoying life on the banks of lovely Lake Constance.

You can visit Linda’s website, find her on Facebook and follow her on Instagram and Twitter @LindaHuber19.

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Murder Most Royal by S.J. Bennett

It’s my pleasure today to share another of my My Weekly online reviews and on this occasion it is of Murder Most Royal by S.J. Bennett. I’ve had The Windsor Knot on my TBR for ages so it’s a real pleasure finally to read S.J. Bennett’s Her Majesty the Queen Investigates series.

Published by Bonnier imprint Zaffre on 10th November 2022, Murder Most Royal is available for purchase here.

Murder Most Royal

December 2016 – A severed hand is found washed up on a beach next to the Queen’s estate at Sandringham.

Elizabeth has become quite accustomed to solving even the most complex of murders. And though she quickly identifies the 70-year-old victim, Edward St Cyr, from his signet ring, the search for his killer is not so straightforward.

St Cyr led an unconventional, often controversial life, making many enemies along the way in the quiet, rural world of North Norfolk, where everyone knows each other’s business.

But when a second man is found dead, and a prominent local woman is nearly killed in a hit-and-run, the mystery takes an even darker turn.

With the Christmas break coming to an end, the Queen and her trusted assistant Rozie must race to discover how the pieces of the puzzle fit together. Or the next victim may be found even closer to home.

Agatha Christie meets The Crown in MURDER MOST ROYAL, the much-anticipated third book in the ‘Her Majesty The Queen Investigates’ mystery series by SJ Bennett – for fans of The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman, Agatha Christie and M.C. Beaton’s Agatha Raisin.

My Review of Murder Most Royal

My full review of Murder Most Royal can be found on the My Weekly website here.

However, what I can say here is that Murder Most Royal is fast paced, engaging, fun and witty and I thoroughly enjoyed it.

Do visit My Weekly to read my full review here.

About S.J. Bennett

S. J. Bennett was born in Yorkshire, England, and travelled the world as an army child and a student of languages. After various jobs as a lobbyist, strategy consultant and start-up project manager she wrote several award-winning books for teenagers before turning to adult crime novels with the Her Majesty the Queen Investigates series. She lives in London and has been a royal watcher for years, but is keen to stress that these are works of fiction: the Queen, to the best of her knowledge, does not secretly solve crimes. Although, if she did, it would probably be a bit like this …

For further information, visit Sophia’s website, follow her on Twitter either as @SJBennettbooks or @sophiabennett and find her on Instagram or Facebook.

Dig It, Digby! by Jodie Parachini

It’s a real pleasure to join the blog tour for children’s book Dig It, Digby! by Jodie Parachini, illustrated by John Joven. My thanks to Rachel of Rachel’s Random Resources for inviting me to take part. I’m sharing my review today.

Dig It, Digby! is available for purchase on Amazon UK and Amazon US.

Dig It, Digby!

Although Digby enjoys building cities with his fellow trucks, he also loves to twirl and groove. Being true to both aspects of his personality will really shake things up at the construction site. The foreman may be gruff and scary, but dancing trucks can really get the job done!

Dig It, Digby! targets all fans of truck/construction books, yet also pushes the boundaries of the typical ‘boy’ book genre. By incorporating dance, it challenges gender roles using nonhuman characters that all children can relate to. Told in joyous rhyme, Dig It, Digby! is 360 words and has the lyricism of Goodnight, Goodnight Construction Site and the stereotype-breaking ethos of Giraffes Can’t Dance.

My Review of Dig It, Digby!

Digby needs some excitement in his job.

I always like to comment on the physical attributes of children’s picture books because it’s likely they are going to take quite a bit of handling. What is brilliant about Dig It, Digby! is that the hard back not only has a strong robust cover, but also comes with a slip cover to protect it further. I loved the fact that the end papers are tyre tracks too as they are in keeping with the industrial setting of the story.

And what a lovely story it is. Digby feels his job is becoming boring and he and the other construction vehicles begin to dance, play music and thoroughly enjoy their lives. Dig It, Digby! is a smashing encouragement to children (and the adults sharing the book with them) to get moving, have fun and express their love of life. This is such an important message to all ages. I can imagine children acting out the jumping and bouncing in the story and thoroughly enjoying it.

Told in excellent rhyme that never feels contrived Dig It, Digby! will really appeal to young children and makes it easy for any adult to read aloud effectively. The alternate end rhyme is so good at promoting children’s own vocabulary and language acquisition as they might be able to guess some of the words coming but will also be introduced to unfamiliar vocabulary so that Dig It, Digby! is educational as well as fun and entertaining. There’s also an excellent balance of text to image.

The illustrations are perfect to accompany the text, bringing the story alive. The construction vehicles have anthropomorphic features that are just right for the target audience and the shapes of the trucks mimic toys children will know so that they have a super frame of reference. There are no insipid colours here either. Each page is vibrant and colourful so that the illustrations convey happiness and vivacity alongside the story.

I really loved Dig It, Digby! and think children will adore it too.

About Jodie Parachini

Jodie Parachini is a children’s author and editor. She lives in a village in Hertfordshire, England, where she loves swimming, gardening, and taking long, rambling hikes with a smelly dog.

For further information, visit Jodie’s website, follow her on Twitter @JodieParachini or find her on Instagram.

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A Wedding in Provence by Katie Fforde

Today I’m back sharing another of my My Weekly online reviews and on this occasion it is of the fabulous Katie Fforde’s A Wedding in Provence.

A Wedding in Provence is published by Penguin and available for purchase through the links here.

A Wedding in Provence

Late summer, 1963.

Fresh from London and a recent cookery course, Alexandra has always loved a challenge.

Which is why she now finds herself standing outside an imposing chateau in Provence.

Waiting for her inside is three silent, rather hostile children who are to be her charges for the next month.

They will soon be more friendly, she tells herself. All they need is some fun, good food and an English education.

Far more of a challenge though is their father – an impossibly good looking French count with whom she is rapidly falling in love . . .

My Review of A Wedding in Provence

My full review of A Wedding in Provence can be found on the My Weekly website here.

However, what I can say here is that A Wedding in Provence has all the Katie Fforde elements her readers know and adore with love in many forms at the heart of her story.

Do visit My Weekly to read my full review here.

About Katie Fforde

Katie Fforde lives in the beautiful Cotswold countryside with her family, and is a true country girl at heart. Each of her books explores a different profession or background and her research has helped her bring these to life. She’s been a porter in an auction house, tried her hand at pottery, refurbished furniture, delved behind the scenes of a dating website, and she’s even been on a Ray Mears survival course. She loves being a writer; to her there isn’t a more satisfying and pleasing thing to do. She particularly enjoys writing love stories. She believes falling in love is the best thing in the world, and she wants all her characters to experience it, and her readers to share their stories.

For further information, visit Katie’s website, find her on Facebook or Instagram and follow her on Twitter @KatieFforde.