The Glorious Dead by Justin Myers

It was my absolute pleasure to hear Justin Myers speak at the Romance Festival in Manchester a few weeks ago where he was so witty and engaging. Consequently I was thrilled to receive a signed copy of his latest book, The Glorious Dead

Published by Renegade on 18th September 2025, The Glorious Dead is available for purchase through the links here.

The Glorious Dead

Laurie Blount, enfant terrible of the West End, the voice of a generation, a shining star.

Also: dead. Very, very dead.

Killed in a car crash in the middle of the night, Laurie exited this world the way he lived his life – dramatically and dangerously.

Laurie ‘s husband Jo, best friend Vivi and goddaughter Rosy must step out from grief ‘s shadow and face life without him. Until rumours of Laurie ‘s unpublished memoir begin to haunt the group. Waspish, wicked and witty, these confessions reveal a side to Laurie nobody really knew . . . or would admit to knowing. But can the words of a dead man be trusted?

Laurie ‘s grieving loved ones are about to discover that comedy and tragedy are the same mistakes, made under different lighting. If Jo, Vivi and Rosy are ever to find peace in the future, they might need to lift the curtain on Laurie ‘s past – as well as their own.

Can a dead man shatter your life one chapter at a time?

My Review of The Glorious Dead

Jo’s husband Laurie has just died in a car crash.

The Glorious Dead was not the book I was expecting to read. I’d anticipated a rather light, gay romcom that served as an entertaining diversion from life. Those lighter elements are present, but The Glorious Dead is so, so much more. 

There’s an intensity to the prose as husband Jo, Laurie’s best friend Vivi and her daughter Rosy, navigate their grief at Laurie’s death. It’s often the most prosaic moments when grief hits them, as it does in real life, so that The Glorious Dead is relatable and moving. With quite a reduced cast of characters too, the story feels intimate and confidential – especially when we have Laurie’s first person thread.

However, as well as surprisingly moving, I also found The Glorious Dead incredibly funny. Justin Myers writes with an acerbic wit that perfectly sums up society. The variety of sentence structure means that sarcasm, irony and humour weave through, balancing Jo’s grief (and, later, his guilt) to perfection. Whilst there are frequent expletives that can often feel misplaced in fiction, in The Glorious Dead there’s a fantastic sense of authorial voice leading the reader through the complexities of life beyond Laurie, making such vocabulary part of the realism and humour. It’s no exaggeration to say I kept thinking of Voltaire’s satirical writing as I read. 

As the plot progresses, themes of friendship, lives after a death, relationships and loyalty swirl through, but there’s also unexpected mystery that elevates the narrative still further into an intriguing and thought-provoking read. And in amongst the pain, there’s hope too so that The Glorious Dead looks into the dark heart of humanity and finds there is also optimism, redemption and positivity.

The characters are fabulous. They are flawed, selfish, deceptive and, to be honest, thoroughly despicable on the whole. And yet they are warm, human and appealing. There’s an irony that the youngest, Rosy, is the most consistent – a kind of Shakespearean Touchstone. She is a wonderful contrast to the others, all of whom I loved and hated in equal measure. Given that the story opens with Laurie’s death in a car accident, I found him rather like a literary car crash. I didn’t always want to read his words, but I simply couldn’t look away! He really is the most appalling, fascinating and vivid character.

The Glorious Dead will entertain you royally. It is a love story. It’s a social commentary. It’s a mystery. It’s also more than the sum of its parts. It will also leave you wondering just how well you know those around you, and perhaps more profoundly, just how well you know yourself. Justin Myers shows us that life is complicated, messy and challenging and we navigate our way through it to the best (or sometimes worst) of our ability.

I thought The Glorious Dead was a remarkable story that delivered far, far more emotion and depth than I expected. I really recommend it. 

About Justin Myers

Justin Myers is a writer and editor from Shipley, Yorkshire, who now lives in London. After years working in journalism, he began his popular, anonymous dating blog The Guyliner in 2010, spent five years as dating and advice columnist in Gay Times and is now a weekly columnist at British GQ. His work has appeared in a number of publications including the Guardian, BuzzFeed and the Irish Times, and his first novel The Last Romeo was published in 2018.

For further information, visit Justin’s website and follow him on X @theguyliner, Instagram, Facebook and Bluesky

The Tiny Tycoons: CyberMental by Dolapo Adeyemi and illustrated by Sarah Leigh Wills

I had meant to review The Tiny Tycoons: CyberMental by Dolapo Adeyemi and illustrated by Sarah-Leigh Wills some weeks ago, but life (or rather a series of deaths) got the better of me! My thanks go to Ben Cameron For sending me a copy of The Tiny Tycoons: CyberMental. It’s my pleasure to share my review today

Published by Grolightly on 29th May 2025, The Tiny Tycoons: CyberMental is available for purchase in all good bookshops and online including here.

The Tiny Tycoons: CyberMental

WARNING: This is NOT another boring “screen time is bad” lecture!

Meet Max and Mia, siblings who accidentally discovered that spilling glitter glue on a comic book could lead to the greatest adventure ever — transforming from digital CONSUMERS into tech-savvy CREATORS!

In Tycoon Town, these everyday kids (and their robot dog Metallia!) are about to show YOUR 8-12 year old how to:

✅ Turn those “just five more minutes” of screen time into “LOOK WHAT I MADE!” moments

✅ Outsmart sneaky apps that treat kids like products instead of people

✅ Balance their digital diet without giving up the fun stuff

✅ Create amazing tech projects that’ll make friends say “WHOA!”

✅ Join a worldwide crew of kid innovators changing the digital landscape

Packed with laugh-out-loud adventures, hands-on activities, and real stories of young creators, this book doesn’t just talk about digital literacy — it transforms it into an epic quest your child won’t want to put down!

FOR PARENTS & EDUCATORS: This isn’t just another children’s book. It’s a science-backed approach to healthy technology use that kids actually enjoy. Includes a comprehensive guide with conversation starters, implementation strategies, and resources to extend learning beyond the page. 

My Review of The Tiny Tycoons: CyberMental

A book of advice and ideas for young entrepreneurs.

I confess that I really didn’t like The Tiny Tycoons: CyberMental to start with as it felt too ‘American’ for my taste. I also confess that I was completely stupid. I finished the book thinking it was super and I will actually be applying some of its advice (such as time limits on activities such as using social media) in my own life!

Divided into chapters that can be read independently or with a friend or adult, information, ideas and suggestions in The Tiny Tycoons: CyberMental are presented in short accessible chunks so that young readers can absorb each part successfully. With white space for readers to make notes, draw and design, the book gives permission to young creative thinkers to experiment and gain self-confidence. I loved the way Dolapo Adeyemi makes it absolutely clear that set-backs, hiccups and failures are simply part of the learning process. There’s also a helpful glossary of terms, and in common with the text throughout the book, these terms are supported by highly relatable analogies so that understanding is possible for youngsters of all abilities.

Equally inspiring are the illustrations by Sarah-Leigh Wills. The cartoon style in The Tiny Tycoons: CyberMental will appeal to young readers, and whilst it is childlike and child friendly, it isn’t childish or patronising. I also fully appreciated the diversity of ethnicity and the range of cultures and countries presented in the Real Stories and Cool Kids sections because they felt inspiring and inclusive. 

The Tiny Tycoons: CyberMental is an accessible, encouraging book that teaches online and community safety without scaremongering, and which stimulates a child’s imagination and shows them that they have incredible potential. What could be better than that? 

About Dolapo Adeyemi

Dolapo Adeyemi is a London-based serial entrepreneur who grew up in Nigeria with an accountant father and entrepreneurial mother, learning early that knowledge was the ultimate currency. With a degree in Chemical Engineering (and later an MBA at London Business School), she worked in the energy sector, started her own business making solar-powered bags, moved into the world of fashion with OYSBY, her own premium footwear brand, and was a finalist in the Draper’ Footwear Awards and was featured in Oprah magazine and other major media.

 Immersing herself in technology and marketing innovation, and now with two daughters, she had an epiphany: we live in a world where only a privileged few truly understand how systems really work – from digital algorithms to financial markets – and we’re failing our children by not giving them this knowledge early. Furthermore, there is no reason why kids cannot understand the dopamine tricks of the attention economy, the origin, value, and systems of money, recognize cognitive biases, and learn to replace conflict with empathy.

Watching her daughters, now 8 and 10 navigate our digital world, she saw both the incredible potential and the pitfalls of technology in young hands. Tiny Tycoons was born from these everyday parenting moments – from explaining how apps work to discussing why we can’t believe everything we see online.

Fur further information, visit Dolapo’s website, or follow her on X @Dollarkpoh

The Second Chance Cinema by Thea Weiss

My enormous thanks to Georgia Hester at Harper Collins for sending me a surprise copy of The Second Chance Cinema by Thea Weiss. It’s my pleasure to share my review today.

The Second Chance Cinema will be published by HQ on 7th October 2025 and is available for purchase through the publisher links here

The Second Chance Cinema

What if the love of your life could watch the story of your past?

At the end of a fog-covered alley, glitters a glamorous cinema. It’s nearly impossible to find. When Ellie and her fiancé, Drake, stumble upon it during a late-night walk, they’re shocked to discover what’s playing inside the red-velvet auditorium: their formative memories.

Drake fears what the cinema might reveal, but eventually gives in when Ellie insists they return for more viewings. She’s haunted by a night from her past that she doesn’t fully remember. This is her opportunity to piece the story back together. But as the memories displayed on screen inch closer to the present, they realize they’re both keeping secrets from each other.

With their wedding on the horizon, Ellie and Drake must decide if seeing their pasts changes their plans for a future together.

Filled with warmth, hope, and a dash of magic, The Second Chance Cinema is both an enchanting escape and a thought-provoking examination of how our memories shape who we are.

My Review of The Second Chance Cinema

Ellie and Drake are newly engaged.

The Second Chance Cinema is an absolutely wonderful read. I had expected a rather light and entertaining love story, but actually what I found had far greater depth and whilst it was enormously entertaining, it was totally mesmerising and fascinating too, with elements of human understanding that transcended my preconceptions. 

The story is beautifully crafted. I adored the sense of America without it dominating the story. There are painterly descriptions that place the reader at the heart of the action but much of the story isn’t about place and action; it’s about feelings and emotions and this is what makes it so compelling.

The prose thrums with underlying tension as Ellie and Drake watch the stories of their lives playing out on the screen inside the mysterious and magical cinema. I loved too, the traditional structure of teh book with three acts bookended by opening credits with a secret scene at the end. It provides a firm backbone to a story that is quite fluid because Ellie and Drake discover that the past might not be quite as they remembered or have the same importance as they believed – a lesson any one of us could learn. Indeed, I could easily see The Second Chance Cinema as a fantastic television series or film itself. 

Ellie and Drake are multi-faceted and intriguing characters and I found my allegiance vacillating between them as aspects of their lives were uncovered. The reader discovers so much about them as they return to the cinema for the midnight screenings of their lives, but I’d argue that the two discover even more about themselves and one other and its fascinating to see this play out. Their relationship with each other and with their friends and family is complicated, realistic and frequently emotional. I found myself swept up in their lives. However, it is their self-discovery, their sense of guilt and their humanity that makes The Second Chance Cinema such a brilliant read.

The Second Chance Cinema is a messy, realistic, love story but it’s also an utterly absorbing and emotional insight into who we are as people, how our past shapes our present and just how hard it is to let go in order to move on. I loved it. Oh, and if you simply want a diverting love story and wonder just whether there’s a happy ending for Ellie and Drake – well, you’ll just have to read the book – and I suggest you do!

About Thea Weiss

Thea Weiss is a copywriter and screenwriter who previously contributed to the Twilight franchise. She lives in Denver with her husband, daughter, and dachshund–and loves going to the movies when she’s not writing. The Second Chance Cinema is her first novel. 

For further information, visit Thea’s website or follow her on Instagram.

Staying in with Janys Thornton

2025 has been ‘a bit of a year’ so I haven’t been able to support authors as much as I’d have liked. However, I’m trying to rectify that a little today by inviting Janys Thornton to stay in with me and tell me a little about her latest book. I’m delighted Janys agreed to come along.

Let’s find out more:

Staying in with Janys Thornton

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag, Janys. 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 latest – Dockyard Widows. I’m really proud of it as it tells the story of the women left behind in the Great War, – those that don’t usually get a voice.

Aha – herstory rather than history then. I understand that you did the artwork for Dockyard Widows too. Congratulations. What can we expect from an evening in with Dockyard Widows?

Dockyard Widows is a rare type of book – a prequel/sequel. I wanted to tell the story of those women widowed when HMS Princess Irene exploded in Sheerness Dockyard in 1915, killing over seventy men. It was said there wasn’t a street untouched. There was a newspaper article that gave information on the money collected for a “disaster fund” and as well as the widows and orphans being beneficiaries, it included dependent elderly parent – but most interesting were the “unmarried mothers acting as housekeepers” to the men. It showed that they recognised that some couples who co-habited were not married, and they wanted to do right by them.

I didn’t know about that event previously. How interesting.

I also wanted to write something for my Dockyard Teachers series, I had written Female Remedies set in 1913/1914, and An Unsustained Charge set in 1917/1918 and wanted to fill the gap. However, I soon realised I couldn’t just tell the story of what happened in 1915 without telling my readers about what came before. Dockyard Widows starts with the various romances that brought our women to the point of the disaster and left them widows, hence the prequel/sequel!

I think that all sounds fascinating. What else have you brought along and why have you brought it?

I’ve brought some of the historical artefacts I use when I do talks about my writing.

I have quite a collection of WWI bits and pieces. My favourites are the brass triangular badges that women workers were awarded, and as well as a badge, I have what is called a “sweetheart” postcard, which has a design of the brooch together with forget-me-nots.

I have some great photos too, I have one showing a schoolroom, but what I like is that on the walls behind the class, are lots of drawings of ships. The children would have seen the Naval ships in the dockyard every day, and most of them would have fathers, brothers, uncles who worked there. All the artefacts end up as little vignettes in my novels.

I think Dockyard Widows – indeed, the whole series – sounds so interesting Janys. Thank you so much for staying in with me to chat all about it. I’ll just give Linda’s Book Bag Readers a few more details, but I wish you every success with the series.

Dockyard Widows

Dockyard Widows tells the story of the lives of a group of women in a small naval dockyard town during WWI- their loves and loses, their small triumphs and loyal support for each other in times of need. This is a community that pulls together through the historic disaster of the explosion of the HMS Princess Irene that touches the lives of everybody. in the town At the very heart of it are the teachers from the Broadway Girls School, Hattie, Betty, and Miss Garrett who do their best to help friend and family through adversity.

Dockyard Widows is available for purchase here.

About Janys Thornton

Janys Thornton is a retired Civil Servant. She is married to Jeremy and they have just celebrated their silver wedding anniversary. They currently have one dog, but a second will soon be joining them.

Janys acts as a grandparent to her nephew’s children where she gets the opportunity to shout but be ignored all at once when she is babysitting.

Janys likes writing, drawing/painting, going to aerobics and visiting museums and galleries.

ADHD Rapped Up! by Mr G

When Tia Das got in touch to see if I’d like a copy of ADHD Rapped Up! by Mr G, I immediately said yes. Not only is ADHD Rapped Up! published by one of my favourite publishers of children’s books, Sweet Cherry, (you’ll find many reviews of them here on Linda’s Book Bag), but my great nephew has ADHD so it felt pertinent. 

ADHD Rapped Up! is published by Sweet Cherry on 25th of September and is available for pre-order here.

ADHD Rapped Up!

Join TikTok sensation Mr G on a fun, interactive journey into the ADHD brain – packed with raps, tips, movement breaks, and cool illustrations to help kids thrive!

Discover how neurodivergent brains work, take movement breaks by ‘shuffling’, learn how to handle tricky situations – and more! This book also includes a free audiobook, free movement break video and a fidget feature.

As well as having ADHD himself, Mr G has been teaching and helping children with ADHD for ten years. He has also helped thousands of people understand ADHD better through his TikTok videos.

My review of ADHD Rapped Up!

A book for 9-12 year olds about ADHD.

What a cracking book! ADHD Rapped Up! works brilliantly on so many levels.

Firstly, it is pitched perfectly to the target audience, with accessible language and more specialised vocabulary explained clearly but without patronising young readers. Both fonts and illustrations are equally appropriate with cartoon style drawings that appeal to the age group as well as a good balance of text, illustration and white space so that the reading isn’t overwhelming. Given that the author also has ADHD, I felt the images of him throughout the book gave the sensation of an adult being on the child’s side throughout. I also really liked his honesty about his own diagnosis which, alongside examples of well known people who have to manage ADHD, gives status to children because they can see famous people or those in authority are just like them.

With ten short, snappy but information packed chapters, I loved the modelling of good teaching practice here. Readers are told what they will discover, the information is given and then there is a brilliant rap to summarise. Not only does this reinforce ADHD information, but it means the book can be used as a teaching tool for rhyme and rhythm too! With QR codes for free audio versions of ADHD Rapped Up! and with examples of Mr G’s fidget break dance, this is a truly accessible and interactive book. 

However, I’d strongly advise not leaving ADHD Rapped Up! to children with ADHD. It might be wonderful for them, but I found much to improve my own life as a an adult without the condition, from highly useful breathing exercises to helpful suggestions for routines to manage feelings and behaviour, making ADHD Rapped Up! a really useful tool for any home or institution. 

ADHD Rapped Up! is an accessible, helpful and engaging introduction to dealing with ADHD, offering support, guidance and advice through methods suited to those with short attention spans or those who struggle to conform to expectations of society. I thought it was great.

About Mr G

Mr G (Jamie Gilbert) is the teacher-turned-viral-sensation spreading positivity and insight on ADHD and SEMH. Jamie’s goal is to enlighten viewers on the positive aspects to neurodiversity, showcasing his students getting involved in fun activities like football and dancing, as well as sharing hacks to maintain focus. Jamie’s influence spans online and offline, as he works alongside the DfE to inform the national curriculum for SEMH schools. 

 Outside of teaching Jamie enjoys spending time in the great outdoors, hiking, watching Newcastle United FC and is a big Star Wars fan! Jamie’s vibrant content and optimistic outlook continues to inspire, not only his students and fellow teachers, but his established community of 1.1million+ followers.

For further information, you’ll find Mr G mainly on TikTok but also on Instagram.

Staying in with Sergio Dalaco

Anyone who knows me will also know that I adore travel, but have been rather constrained because of family duties in recent times. One of the trips I adored was when we went to the Iguazú Falls as part of an exciting tour taking in parts of South America and Antarctica. We were lucky enough to take a helicopter ride over the falls as well as a boat trip under them. Consequently, when I realised Sergio Dalaco’s new novel has that Argentinian setting, I simply had to invite him to stay in with me and tell me all about it.

Let’s see what Sergio told me:

Staying in with Sergio Dalaco

A warm welcome to Linda’s Book Bag Sergio and thank you for staying in with me. Tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening and why have you chosen it?

Tonight, I’ve brought Quentara and the Voice of the Jungle, a novel born from the depths of the rainforest near the Iguazú Falls in Argentina.

I chose it because it’s not the story of a man, nor of a creature — but of a living being in transformation. Quentara is a presence that transcends form, a spirit of the jungle that listens, learns, and evolves. The novel follows their path of awakening, guided by the ancestral wisdom of the Guaraní people and the silent teachings of the forest.

But more than that, I’ve brought this book because I believe in the power of stories. We are made of them. Stories shape how we see the world, how we relate to others, and how we understand ourselves. They give voice to what we feel, to what we fear, and to what we hope.

I totally agree – and I think the reader’s own experiences shapes their response to what they read too. Tell me more.

Quentara and the Voice of the Jungle is a story that listens as much as it speaks. It carries a voice — subtle, ancient, and resonant — that connects with our own inner voices, inviting us to pause, reflect, and remember who we are.

So, what can we expect from an evening in with Quentara and the Voice of the Jungle?

Spending an evening with Quentara and the Voice of the Jungle is not so much reading a story as entering a space — a living, breathing space where silence speaks and the forest listens.

The experience is immersive. You’ll hear the rustle of leaves, feel the pulse of the earth, and sense the presence of something ancient moving through the pages. Quentara’s journey unfolds not in loud declarations, but in quiet revelations — the kind that echo inside you long after you’ve closed the book.

Quentara and the Voice of the Jungle sounds fantastic.

There’s a voice that runs through the narrative — not always visible, but always felt. It’s the voice of the jungle, of memory, of spirit. And if you allow it, it will meet your own inner voice, stirring thoughts, emotions, and questions you didn’t know were waiting.

Did you just use text to create this effect? 

The book is also enriched by illustrations that don’t just accompany the text — they extend it. Each image captures a moment, a feeling, a breath of the story, inviting the reader to pause and reflect. And for those who wish to go deeper, the book offers a few quiet companions: a reading guide, a vocabulary that expands the meaning of certain words, and a section called Insight of the Work — not to explain, but to invite reflection. These elements are not meant to instruct, but to accompany the reader in their own journey through the forest of ideas.

I think Quentara and the Voice of the Jungle sounds fascinating.

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

I’ve brought the jungle with me — not in its entirety, of course, but in fragments: the sound of cicadas at dusk, the mist rising from the Iguazú Falls, the scent of wet earth after rain. These are the elements that shaped the story, and they continue to shape me.

To help readers feel this world, I’ve brought a soaring drone flight over the rainforest canopy. This is the landscape where the story unfolds. In the density of these forests, other lives are lived, other rhythms followed, other voices heard. You can access this experience here

Quentara and their friends walk through these landscapes, listening to their voices, learning from their silences.

I have a feeling that listening is something we could all do more attentively Sergio!

I’ve also brought an image that speaks volumes without words — a photograph of the jungle, vast and alive, with the city skyline quietly emerging in the distance. It’s a visual metaphor for one of the novel’s deepest tensions: the coexistence — and sometimes collision — of two worlds. This is the landscape where Quentara and their friends walk, listen, and learn. A place where ancient rhythms still pulse beneath the surface of modern life.

And I’ve brought a cup of yerba mate — the infusion that has accompanied many quiet mornings and long nights of writing. It’s more than a drink. It’s a ritual, a grounding presence, a way of listening.

Oo. I need to try that!

And of course, I’ve brought Quentara. Not as a character, but as a presence. Quentara doesn’t speak in words, but in gestures, silences, and transformations. Tonight, they sit with us — still, attentive, and alive.

Finally, I’ve brought the visual soul of the book. The cover, designed by Fabián Robles, is not just an image — it’s a portal: a visual invitation to step into a world where nature and spirit intertwine. Inside, you’ll find illustrations by Braian Belén that breathe with the story — each one crafted to capture the essence of a chapter, a moment, a feeling. And the English translation by Grecia Fonseca is the result of a deep, thoughtful collaboration — a shared search for the right words to honour the spirit of every sentence.

I love the sense of collaboration there.

Readers will find not only a story, but the passion of artists who listened, felt, and gave form to something sacred.

How wonderful. I’m so grateful you stayed in with me to discuss Quentara and the Voice of the Jungle, Sergio. I have a feeling it would be a book that I’d love. How about you making me a cup of yerba mate whilst I give readers a few more details?

Quentara and the Voice of the Jungle

In the heart of the jungle, where ancient spirits still murmur through the trees and every creature moves by sacred law, a great leader has fallen. With his death, a forgotten voice stirs once more: the voice of the jungle itself.

Quentara and the Voice of the Jungle is a lyrical eco-fantasy rooted in Indigenous myth and ecological urgency. It follows Quentara—a curious forest-born being—on a journey that defies ancestral rules. Guided by his loyal friend Taí and the wisdom of Aruárua, a legendary harpy who remembers the world before men, Quentara must cross into the human world to deliver a message of memory, unity, and survival.

This contemporary fable invites readers of all ages to pause, reflect, and reconnect with the natural world. A celebration of storytelling and a call to listen—to the jungle, to each other, and to what we may have forgotten.

Quentara and the Voice of the Jungle is available for purchase here

About Sergio Dalaco

 

Sergio Dalaco (Argentina, 1973) is a writer with a humanist background and over twenty years of experience in personal development. His journey through diverse cultures and life experiences has shaped a deep and reflective view of what it means to be human — and how we relate to the world around us.

In his writing, Sergio explores questions that go beyond the surface: What does it truly mean to progress? Can we create beauty and comfort without harming other living beings or future generations? What is our place in the web of life, and how do we reconnect with the nature that sustains us?

His debut novel in English, Quentara and the Voice of the Jungle, is a poetic and thoughtful reflection on these themes. It invites readers to listen to the voices that whisper from the jungle, from memory, and from the unseen — voices that remind us of who we are, and who we might become.

The Birdcage by Eve Chase

It’s my pleasure today to share my review of The Birdcage by Eve Chase which was my U3A book group choice this month. It makes a change for me actually to have read the book in time for today’s meeting!

The Birdcage was published in paperback by Penguin on 13th October 2022 and is available for purchase through the publisher links here

The Birdcage

When half-sisters Lauren, Flora, and Kat are unexpectedly summoned to the Cornish house where they spent their childhood summers, it’s the first time they’ve dared return.

Because the wild cliffs and windswept beaches hide a twenty-year-old secret.

The truth about what they did.

Someone who remembers them lurks in the shadows, watching their every move.

And there are other secrets, even darker than their own, waiting to be unearthed . . .

My Review of The Birdcage

Half-sisters Lauren, Kat and Flora are back with their artist father in Cornwall. 

I thoroughly enjoyed The Birdcage, because, although it is a slow burn narrative, the tension spirals upwards like a bird on thermals until the reader is sucked into the story and needs to know quite what has happened on that 1999 day of the solar eclipse. 

I admit that my heart sank when I realised the plot had two timeframes and three points of view, but I needn’t have worried because Rock Point house is an unwavering constant that binds everything together. In fact, far from being sprawling and unfathomable, I found the story claustrophobic and frequently sinister, even when some of the action is quite prosaic. And I think that’s the point about The Birdcage. There are highly dramatic moments, but often Eve Chase explores with great skill the way life flips as a result of an ordinary or careless word or action. There’s huge realism here. It’s a human trait to do something thoughtless that reverberates through the community, through relationships and through our lives and the author explores this perfectly. The Birdcage title fits flawlessly into the story with literal, metaphorical and emotional resonance and a sense of being trapped, but you’ll need to read the story to discover quite why for yourself! 

I found the dynamics between the siblings actually quite disturbing as Kat and Flora behave with spitefulness bordering malevolence towards Lauren. It was Lauren who appealed the most because her otherness leaves her exposed and vulnerable. I felt I knew Kat least and that Eve Chase had deliberately created her that way because other characters know less about her city life too. I thoroughly appreciated the way we never truly know what happens in other people’s lives and minds is explored. There’s a real sense of how childhood relationships impact adult behaviours and how we are moulded by early experience so that we cannot escape who we truly are. Indeed, I feared for Raff, as I felt there was a danger that he might grow into the kind of person his talented, yet selfish, grandfather Charlie seems to be.

The plot is carefully crafted, with the parrot Bertha reminding me of Lear’s Fool, acting both as a kind of Greek chorus and an unexpected voice of reason and truth. I loved the way truth is finally uncovered and, whilst I found Charlie irritating and self-centered at best, and completely flawed and irredeemable at worst, he too is the kind of traditional anti-hero whose behaviour shapes so much of the narrative. I thought this was such clever writing. And speaking of the writing, there are some beautiful descriptions so that the sense of place is vivid and strong. 

I think that those readers looking for high octane action will find the pacing of The Birdcage too measured for their taste, However, those looking for an insightful exploration of family dynamics, with a layered sense of threat and themes of obfuscation, art, trust and honesty, will find The Birdcage fascinating and engaging. I most certainly did.

About Eve Chase

Eve Chase is an internationally bestselling British novelist who writes rich, layered and suspenseful novels. Including Richard & Judy pick, no.1 kindle bestseller The Midnight Hour, The Birdcage, The Glass House (The Daughters of Foxcote Manor, US) Sunday Times top ten and Richard and Judy Book Club pick, The Vanishing of Audrey Wilde (The Wildling Sisters, US) longlisted for the HWA Gold Crown Award, and Black Rabbit Hall, winner of Paris’ Saint-Maur en Poche prize for Best Foreign Fiction.

For further information, follow Eve on Instagram, Twitter/X @evepollychase, Bluesky and Facebook.

My Friends by Fredrik Backman

I’m very lucky to be sent lots of wonderful books so it’s very rare that I actually ask for a book just for me and not for ‘work’. However, when I saw the fabulous Simon and Schuster Christmas Gift Guide contained the latest novel from a favourite author, I simply couldn’t resist requesting My Friends by Fredrick Backman and my enormous thanks go to Tomisin Delano for sending me a copy.

Fredrik Backman was the first author I ever met over a decade ago when A Man Called Ove was published and you’ll find his other appearances on Linda’s Book Bag with my reviews here

Out now in hardback, ebook and audio, from Simon and Schuster and coming in paperback on 12th February 2026, My Friends is available for purchase through the links here

My Friends

You have to take life for granted, the artist thinks, the whole thing: sunrises and slow Sunday mornings and water balloons and another person’s breath against your neck. That’s the only courageous thing a person can do.

 In the corner of one of the most famous paintings in the world three tiny figures sit at the end of a pier. Most people don’t even notice them. Most people think it’s just a depiction of the sea. But Louisa, an aspiring artist herself, knows otherwise.

Twenty-five years earlier, in a distant seaside town, a group of teenagers seek refuge from their bruising home lives by spending long summer days together. They tell jokes, they share secrets, and they commit small acts of rebellion. These lost souls find in each other a reason to get up each morning, a reason to dream, a reason to love.

Out of that summer emerges a transcendent work of art, a painting that will unexpectedly be placed into 18-year-old Louisa’s care. Determined to learn how it came to be and to decide what to do with it, Louisa embarks on a cross-country journey.  But the closer she gets to the painting’s birthplace, the more nervous she becomes.

 In this stunning testament to the transformative, timeless power of friendship and art, Louisa is proof that happy endings don’t always take the form we expect.

My Review of My Friends

Louisa wants to see a painting.

Oh dear. That’s every book for the rest of the year ruined! I absolutely, unconditionally adored My Friends – and given I had unreasonably high expectations of a book from Fredrik Backman, that’s saying something. It’s actually impossible to convey just how this story affected me and resonated so deeply within me. 

The essence of the plot is relatively simple. Two strangers share confidences on a train – in much the same way many folk do. And that’s what’s so important. Much of the narrative considers the ordinariness of life, with the deepest of meaning coming from things we ignore, the things we don’t say and or do, every bit as much – if not more – than those we do. Fredrik Backman looks deep into the heart of humanity and lays it bare in the most stunning read. There’s something here any reader can relate to, so that reading My Friends is the most amazing oxymoronic blend. One moment I was crying with laughter, often because of the dialogue, and the next I was sobbing with emotion. Frequently I was doing both simultaneously so that I simply wasn’t in control of my own emotions, as a result of the wonderful writing. There were so many passages where I felt the author articulated flawlessly exactly what I thought or have experienced, making me wonder if he had access to my soul. Having said all that, there are moments in the plot where I was completely taken aback by their unexpectedness. This aspect of the writing is brilliant. 

The characters are superb. The concept of finding those to whom we belong, the depiction of teenagers and the profound understanding of the lost, the different, and the emotionally and physically broken, is a total triumph. As Louisa hears Ted’s stories, she gradually gets to know the others and I thought it was wonderful the way the artist’s name is not revealed until Louisa has a sense of who he truly is. 

Louisa herself is the most pitch-perfect blend of intelligence and naivety, of strength and vulnerability, of loquaciousness and internal thought. I’d defy anyone not to believe in her wholeheartedly. I loved Ted unconditionally too. He is a wonderful lynchpin between past and present, and between the friends. Not artistically talented like the artist, not insanely determined like Joar, nor feisty like Ali, he is, nonetheless, vital to their lives. I wept with and for him. I laughed alongside him.

I thought the opaqueness of the setting was magnificent because it makes My Friends so relatable. This narrative could be taking place in any country. There are universally recognisable elements like supermarkets, the coast, schools and railway stations, ensuring that readers can place themselves within the action and engaging them further – if that were possible!

In case it isn’t clear, I thought My Friends was fabulous. Filled with tenderness and human understanding, My Friends is a love letter to art, friendship and what constitutes home. My Friends is, for me, sheer, unmissable perfection. I loved it beyond measure and cannot recommend it highly enough.

About Fredrik Backman

Fredrik Backman is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of A Man Called Ove, My Grandmother Asked Me to Tell You She’s Sorry, Britt-Marie Was Here, Beartown, Us Against You, Anxious People, The Winners, My Friends, as well as two novellas and one work of nonfiction. His books are published in more than forty countries. He lives in Stockholm, Sweden, with his wife and two children.

For further information, Find Fredrik Backman on Facebook or follow him on Twitter/X @BackmanLand and Instagram.

Staying in with H.S. Norup

Regular visitors to Linda’s Book Bag will notice I have been rather quiet of late, following Mum’s death, but it gives me great pleasure to try out a bit of blogging again and welcome H. S Norup to the blog today to tell me all about her latest middle grade children’s book. I am a huge advocate of children reading for pleasure and I think this book sounds perfect.

Let’s find out more:

Staying in with H. S. Norup

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

Thank you for inviting me to your cosy book bag blog.

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

I have brought my newest book The Changeling Child, which came out in August. It takes place in autumn, and it’s quite spooky, so it’s perfect to read at this time of year. I would suggest with a hot drink, pine-scented candles, and a nice fluffy (preferably red and faerie-deterring) blanket.

That sounds perfect for the darkening evenings. What can we expect from an evening in with The Changeling Child?

The Changeling Child is Alfred’s and Saga’s second adventure in the world that was introduced in Into The Faerie Hill, but it can be read as a standalone story. Although the book is written for a middle-grade audience, I have been assured by adult readers that there is something for all ages in the story, which will appeal to lovers of dark folklore. It explores the links between nature and faeries.

I think all good children’s books can be enjoyed by adults too! 

So, you can expect to encounter a whole host of tricksy and fearsome faeries, who are not at all pleased with humans and the way our infrastructure spread and encroach on nature and harm the Faerie realm.

I love the sound of that. How have your books been received? 

To quote the review by Tamsin Rosewell and Thomas Taylor in the latest newsletter from the illustrious FAIRY INVESTIGATION SOCIETY: “Both these novels weave our oldest, darkest fairy-lore, in which the faerie folk are certainly not sweet and glittery, and their moral codes are very different to our own, with conspiracy preoccupations about the environment and our disruption of the natural landscape. From the wickedly sinister pixies – Little Mother and Little Father – to the austerely cruel high fae, there are plenty of otherworldly beings to spark the imagination, as our young protagonists, Alfred and Saga, battle to save two worlds, as well as find their own places in both of them.”

How brilliant! You must be delighted. 

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

I have also brought Saga, one of the two main characters. She’s a fierce eco-warrior, who fights for nature and dreams of becoming the David Attenborough of the faerie world. And because he is her protector, Mr Tumbleweed, Saga’s tree sprite companion, has tagged along. That is quite lucky for us, because Mr Tumbleweed requires payment in cake, so Saga has been forced to bring a basketful of his favourites. There are chocolate brownies, blueberry muffins, half a lemon drizzle cake, and a whole red velvet cake with extra frosting on top. 

Now that’s my kind of guest! You can all come again…

What would you like, Linda? I think I’ll take a slice of lemon drizzle.

I’d like them all so I think I’ll start with a chocolate brownie.

I also see a flask of Saga’s mum’s freshly pressed apple juice. Isn’t it delicious?

It is indeed.

Let’s eat, while Saga tells us all about her litter-pick walks and the protest against the motorway tunnel she organised in Into The Faerie Hill. She’s also happy to talk about how she solved the mystery of the missing child in The Changeling Child. Perhaps she’ll even hint at the dangerous mountain climb she undertook to save the Faerie fortress from vanishing into nothingness. (As long as you promise not to tell her parents. If they knew what she and Alfred get up to, she would surely be banned from ever leaving their farm.)

It sounds to me as if Saga gets up to all kinds of things…

But if you want all the fantastical details and find out exactly how Alfred tricked the most fearsome faerie, I suggest reading the book…

I think that sounds like an excellent idea. Thank you so much for staying in with me to chat about this latest book. Now, you sort out the cakes and I’ll give readers a few more details about The Changeling Child:

The Changeling Child

Twelve years ago, a child vanished from his cradle. He was never seen nor spoken of again. Saga is desperate to discover what happened – did he really just disappear? Or was he whisked away to the Faerie kingdom, to be raised as one of their own?

As she searches for the truth, her best friend Alfred has his own vital mission. The mayor’s relentless construction projects are devastating the natural world, and now the fearsome faeries want revenge. Only Alfred, a demi fae, can restore peace between the two realms.

But as he journeys deeper into the magical kingdom than ever before, the two friends start to suspect that the lost child could be the key to everything…

The Changeling Child was published by Pushkin Press Children’s Books on 14th August 2025 and is available for purchase through the links here

About H.S. Norup

H.S. Norup is the award-winning author of Into the Faerie Hill, The Hungry Ghost and The Missing Barbegazi – a Sunday Times Book of the Year in 2018. She grew up in Denmark, where she devoured fairy tales and escaped into books. After living in six different countries, she now resides in Switzerland and writes stories inspired by her travels, set in the borderlands between the real and imaginary worlds. When she’s not writing or reading, she spends her time outdoors either skiing, hiking, swimming or taking photos.

For further information, visit H. S. Norup’s website and find her on Twitter/X @HSNorup, Instagram, Facebook and Bluesky