Chatting with Chris Malone about #FutureProof on Publication Day

It’s been my pleasure to welcome Chris Malone to Linda’s Book Bag before, to celebrate the first two books in her #Glitch series, #stoptheglitch which you’ll find us discussing here and #ISOLATE which we chatted about here. Today Chris is back to tell me all about the final book in the series. Let’s find out more:

Staying in with Chris Malone

Welcome back to Linda’s Book Bag, Chris. Thank you for agreeing to stay in with me once more.

Hello again Linda. It is really lovely to catch up with you today.

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

 I have brought along my latest thriller,#FutureProof, because today is publication day.

Happy publication day Chris! So, what can we expect from an evening in with #FutureProof?

Well, #Futurefroof works as a standalone thriller, even though it is the final book in my Glitch trilogy. Just imagine what it must have been like for Poppy, growing up ‘around the feet of spies, diplomats and assassins,’ in an eco-camp on a wild Welsh clifftop. Needless to say, she doesn’t ‘fit’ into society. By the year 2034, nearly sixteen, she is in despair, as many of her friends are hooked on virtuality: entire virtual worlds that are replacing reality.

This sounds scarily plausible Chris. Tell me more.

This multi-million-pound gaming platform has been created by Nathan Price, who once masterminded many of Robin’s campaigns to change the world. He has launched a new chart-topping virtual hero, Pia, who is an exact replica of Poppy. A digital twin. But Poppy hasn’t been consulted, and when she discovers her alter ego, she is incandescent with rage. You can imagine the furore which follows. Yet Robin expects Nathan and Poppy to work harmoniously together on the campaign #FutureProof.

Crikey. I have a feeling we’re not too far away from such a situations. What else can we expect?

There are tensions, kidnaps, escapes, conflicting plots, culminating in the denouement, involving two space rockets …

And Rick, a new character to the trilogy, injects an element of scepticism: ‘All this about changing the world. How many of us have said it, knowing that in reality, we are just small people, without influence, without power, and without resource to make any difference at all. We cannot change the world. That’s why we need art; music, fantasy games, to escape the harsh reality of the hopelessness of our existence. That’s what’s real, I’m afraid Poppy.’

#FutureProof certainly confronts contemporary tensions.

I think it sounds utterly brilliant and very, very concerning. I must bump it up my TBR!

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

I have also brought along the first two books in the trilogy: #stoptheglitch and #isolate (you and I stayed in together in October 2020 and again in 2021). You liked the sound of Robin, who had unwillingly become a celebrity, championing the ethical life, and, despite age and weariness, she stars again in #FutureProof.

I remember those occasions well Chris.

As the trilogy ends with cups of tea (after all the drama), and I know you love your cuppa, I will bring my favourite Sri Lankan loose tea and, in keeping with the eco-themes in the book, some new everlasting tea bags (have you heard of those!?).

I haven’t but they are VERY much my kind of thing. I am addicted to tea I think – you know me only too well!

I will bring vegan bacon and rolls for with our tea; hopefully we can cook outdoors, like Poppy and her brother Cai in #FutureProof. Poppy says, ‘I can smell the waft of frying food. Nothing beats breakfast outside …The mood is upbeatwith a buzz of conversation. Buried in this hopeful crowd is Robin, her hands gripping a cup of tea, her face optimistic.’

We could all do with a bit of optimism I think…

Despite the political scepticism and contemporary realism in each of the three books, my vision of the future is, essentially, optimistic. Although we cannot escape the fact that ‘our time on this planet is limited,’ the books leave the reader in no doubt that, ‘the future is in our hands.’

Not only do all three books sound wonderful, Chris, I love the concept that life is what we make it. Thank you so much for staying in with me and happy publication day again. 

#FutureProof

Poppy has lived off-grid at Caernef Camp throughout her life, and feels alienated by the dominance of digital existence in the 2030s. Yet Poppy cannot escape the espionage surrounding her unusual upbringing and becomes entangled in a tech billionaire’s virtuality game where she discovers her digital twin who has been unethically created using AI.

Incensed, Poppy aligns herself with Miranda but finds herself a key player in #FutureProof, a confusing battleground between old adversaries Miranda and Robin. In this immersive world, will her naivety mean she will be exploited by the adults around her who she thought she could trust?

Poppy is a toddler in #stoptheglitch, a child in #isolate, and then a teenager, who narrates #FutureProof.

#FutureProof is published today, 12th October 2023, by Burton Mayers and is available for purchase on Amazon and from Waterstones.

About Chris Malone

After retiring from a busy education career, Chris was the first female thriller author to join Burton Mayers Books. Following the successful publication of #stoptheglitch and #isolate, #FutureProof now completes the trilogy. Chris also worked with Burton Mayers Books on the publication of A School Inspector Calls, but who is the fool in the school.

Having returned, with her husband, to live in Herefordshire, Chris is now enjoying a quieter pace of life, renovating the house, rewilding the garden, reading, writing and campaigning. She has willingly swapped her smart black heels for sturdy boots.

For more information about Chris, visit her website and follow her on Twitter @CMoiraM or find Chris on Facebook.

Wrapped with a Beau by Lillie Vale

My enormous thanks to Tracy Fenton for inviting me to participate in the blog tour for Lillie Vale’s Wrapped with a Beau. It’s my pleasure to share my review today.

Wrapped with a Beau is published in paperback today, 12th October 2023, by Zaffre and is available for purchase here.

Wrapped with a Beau

In its heyday, Piney Peaks and its beloved Christmas house were made famous by Sleighbells Under Starlight, a romantic holiday movie. Fifty years later, the small town is ready for a new love story.

Elisha Rowe has her heart set on one thing and one thing only: putting her hometown back on the map. So, when she gets the chance to secure the long-hoped-for sequel to Sleighbells Under Starlight, she’s willing to do whatever it takes to make sure everything goes smoothly. Unfortunately, that includes claiming to have already gotten permission to film at the town’s historic Christmas House-permission she was very much denied by the mysterious new owner.

City boy Ves Hollins is only back in Piney Peaks long enough to sell the house he inherited from his great-aunt. The holidays have always been tough for Ves, and it’s not any easier when he’s distracted by memories of a Christmas long, long ago, and the irresistible charm of his new neighbour, Elisha. He has no plans to put down roots or fall in love…even if Elisha is unravelling his hesitations like a bad Christmas sweater.

There’s no question the two are opposites in every way. Ves is undeniably frosty. Elisha is brimming with warmth. He doesn’t do commitment. She never runs from a challenge. But as the two grow closer, they quickly realize that the growing spark between them may be just what the season calls for…

My Review of Wrapped with a Beau

Someone is breaking into Maeve’s house! 

Wrapped with a Beau was an unexpected novel. I’d expected a romantic read with enemies to lovers and a happy ever after ending and to some extent I got that – think candy canes, romance and snow, but I hadn’t reckoned on either the level of sexual explicitness or the emotional pull of the story. It’s pretty racy in places! 

There’s a clever structure to Wrapped with a Beau because it’s a Russian doll of a novel; reading like a romantic Christmas movie with a romantic Christmas movie as a catalyst for the action. This gives it depth and layers and a sense of history that I really appreciated.

Both Ves and Elisha are warm and convincing, but it was Ves who held the most fascination for me because he develops more and there’s a sadness and isolation in his past that feels touching to read about. That said, I liked the strength of character in Elisha too. She is principled, friendly and certainly no push over. Indeed, all the characters are well depicted so that there’s a real sense of community in Piney Peaks.

The Piney Peaks setting is gorgeous. It’s vividly depicted and very attractive. Lillie Vale has the ability to appeal to all the reader’s senses with a filmic quality so that each one is extremely well catered for highly entertainingly. I want to move there immediately. I loved the sense of social intimacy and the way Ves and Bentley are treated and viewed quite differently by those who care about Elisha. 

As well as a spicy romance, Lillie Vale considers family and belonging, the way our treatment as a child might impact us as adults and how actions speak louder than words so that as well as being a fun read, I found real moments of affecting emotion in the story.

I thoroughly enjoyed Wrapped with a Beau, because it’s romantic, sexy and entertaining. Certainly it has all the elements one would expect from the genre but there’s rather more to it too!

About Lillie Vale

Lillie Vale is the author of books for both teens and adults, including The Decoy Girlfriend, Beauty and the Besharam, The Shaadi Set-Up and Small Town Hearts, an American Library Association’s 2020 Rainbow Books List selection. She writes about secrets and yearning, complicated and ambitious girls who know what they want, the places we call home and people we find our way back to, and the magic we make. Born in Mumbai, she grew up in Mississippi, Texas, and North Dakota, and now lives in an Indiana college town.

For further information, find Lillie on Twitter/X  @LillieLabyrinth and Instagram or visit her website

There’s more with these other bloggers too:

Staying in with Ian Moore on The Man Who Didn’t Burn publication day

It’s always so exciting being in at the start of a new book and with today’s guest, Ian Moore, I’m delighted to welcome him to Linda’s Book Bag on publication day for his latest thriller. My enormous thanks to Laura Sherlock for putting us in touch with one another. Let’s find out all about this new book:

Staying in with Ian Moore

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag Ian and thank you for staying in with me.

Thanks for inviting me firstly, and thanks for accepting the reverse invite to come here to the Loire Valley in France, where I live. Bienvenue.

Merci Ian. C’est tres gentil. Tell me (in English please as it’s 40 odd years since I did any French during the first year of my degree), which of your books have you brought along and why?

I have brought my latest book The Man Who Didn’t Burn, as it’s out today and a big departure from the cosy crime I’m known for writing.

Happy Publication Day! What can we expect from an evening in with The Man Who Didn’t Burn?

What can you expect from the evening? Well hopefully, nothing too overplanned. What you’ll more than likely get is an evening that’s a lot like my main character Juge d’Instruction Matthieu Lombard, and that is a fascinating mix of French and English that doesn’t necessarily know where it’s going.

That sounds more like the story of my life Ian! Go on.

There’s a stereotype about the French that their meal times are legendary in length, and like all stereotypes, it’s based on truth. It’s why they don’t have a Boxing Day in France, it’s because they’re still at the table from Christmas Day.

I can fully appreciate that. I once had a seven hour meal when staying with a French family during my A’Levels. 

But in my experience of mixing French and English meals you’ll get all the usual French discourse, passionate discourse at that, often heated. Laughter, wine, sadness, philosophy, wine… and then that very English element which is slightly uncomfortable with the emotion displayed, and therefore wants to challenge it. That’s Lombard, he is of both worlds.

I love the dichotomy you’re suggesting there. What else have you brought along and why have you brought it?

I’m working on the assumption that everyone there is who I want to be there. People make lists of ‘Dead or Alive’ Dinner party guests, if that was Lombard he would invite his late wife, Madeleine.

I think we can all think of those sorts of guest lists.

Firstly, I’m bringing a notepad and pen. My experience of these Entente Cordiale-ish soirées are that there are gems of confrontation, pearls of wisdom and rampant dogma that can be used for a later date. I could also bring something that would literally provoke, like Charles Aznavour’s Greatest Hits – but he sings them in English.

Really? are you sure about the adjective ‘Greatest’ there?

A magnificent album, by the way. Or, and this is more likely, the boxset of Inspector Morse.

I wanted Lombard to have his roots in Morse, not only in a barren personal life, though that may change, but the fact that he shares top-billing with the town in which he lives. For Morse, it was Oxford. For Lombard, it’s Tours, the ancient capital of France. The fortunate thing about Morse is that I can watch them anew as I have, in many cases, forgotten whodunnit and why. Then, once I’ve watched an episode, I’ll go back to the table, pick up the baton of controversy or provocation that I passed on, and re-enter the fray. Just for the sport of it. Exactly like Lombard.

I am delighted I have a copy of The Man Who Didn’t Burn on my TBR pile Ian as I think I’m going to enjoy meeting him very much indeed. Thanks so much for staying in to chat about the book. It sounds a cracker.

The Man Who Didn’t Burn

A KILLER. A SAINT. A TOWN FULL OF WHISPERS

When an English expat is brutally murdered, his charred corpse left on a Loire Valley hillside, the police turn to juge d’instruction Matthieu Lombard to find the perpetrator.

Instead, Lombard discovers a wealth of secrets, grudges and feuds in the idyllic town of Saint-Genèse-sur-Loire. He begins to suspect that the remaining members of the Comité des Fêtes know more about the death than they are letting on.

But rather than towards an arrest, each clue he uncovers seems to point in one, unexpected direction: Joan of Arc. Is the answer to the murder hiding in the barroom gossip of the Lion d’Or? Or in another century altogether?

The thrilling new crime series from The Times-bestselling author of Death and Croissants.

Published by Duckworth today, 12th October 2023, The Man Who Didn’t Burn is available for purchase through the links here.

About Ian Moore

Author image courtesy of Steve Best

Ian Moore is a leading comedian and TV/radio performer. He is the author of the bestselling Follet Valley series, which includes Death and Croissants and Death and Fromage; as well as two memoirs on life in France, À la Mod and C’est Modnifique

Ian lives in rural France and commutes back to the UK every week.

For further information, visit Ian’s website, follow him on Twitter/X @ianmooreauthor and find Ian on Instagram and Facebook.

Reasons to Stay Alive by Matt Haig

I had meant to post my review of Reasons to Stay Alive by Matt Haig on Monday this week when it was out discussion book at the U3A reading group to which I belong, but sadly life got the better of me. Then yesterday when it was Mental Health Day it was my sister’s birthday so I put my energies into her day. Still, better late than never with a review – even if I am horrendously late actually reading the book!

I have, however, previously reviewed one of Matt Haig’s children’s books Evie in the Jungle, here.

Reasons to Stay Alive was published in paperback by Canongate on 31st December 2015 and is available for purchase here.

Reasons to Stay Alive

WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO FEEL TRULY ALIVE?

Aged 24, Matt Haig’s world caved in. He could see no way to go on living. This is the true story of how he came through crisis, triumphed over an illness that almost destroyed him and learned to live again.

A moving, funny and joyous exploration of how to live better, love better and feel more alive, Reasons to Stay Alive is more than a memoir. It is a book about making the most of your time on earth.

“I wrote this book because the oldest clichés remain the truest. Time heals. The bottom of the valley never provides the clearest view. The tunnel does have light at the end of it, even if we haven’t been able to see it . . . Words, just sometimes, really can set you free.”

My Review of Reasons to Stay Alive

An insight into one man’s mental illness.

Now here’s the thing. When I started reading Reasons to Stay Alive I really didn’t like it. I was feeling fed up, following a foot injury when I wasn’t able to do what I wanted, and reading about Matt Haig’s experience of depression was making me cross. I almost gave up reading the book. I just wanted to say, ‘Oh get over yourself. We’re all fed up…’ until the penny dropped. Yes, I was fed up, but here was a man who had a severe mental illness far outside the parameters of my own feelings and experience. I suddenly understood that my emotions were nothing like Matt Haig’s experiences. Immediately I felt more positive. Certainly I was still in a bit of a slump, but I wasn’t depressed and I wanted to read on because, importantly, I was gaining an understanding of what it truly means to be depressed. Reading Reasons to Stay Alive was making me a better human.

Reasons to Stay Alive is both an easy and a difficult read. Matt Haig’s prose is engaging and accessible with a self-deprecating humour that made me smile, but his subject is uncomfortable and affecting so that his underpinning messages and the way he educates the reader to understand another person’s life is deceptive. The reader doesn’t truly grasp the impact and effect of the book until the end. 

It isn’t the checklist at the end of Reasons to Stay Alive, nor the list of useful contacts that makes the book so important and helpful; rather it’s Matt Haig’s honesty in outlining his experience so that others can find affinity, advice and connection. It doesn’t matter where on the scale of good or poor mental health a reader is, in Reasons to Stay Alive there is kindness, realism and a sense of belonging that gives a sense of humanity in a world where it can sometimes feel elusive. Mental health aside, this is a book about being human and humane.

Having begun the book irritated (and if I’m honest, totally selfish in my reading approach), I finished Reasons to Stay Alive feeling positive, uplifted, and more aware of what other people might be thinking and feeling. I went from a negative attitude to feeling that this might just be a book to save someone’s life when they are at their lowest ebb. It gave me permission to be myself and not just accept my situation, but to be content with what I have and who I am. I rather feel I owe Matt Haig, and all those with true mental health struggles, an apology for my flippant and ignorant approach prior to reading Reasons to Stay Alive. I’ve gained so much from this book and Matt Haig’s advice. I won’t, however, be taking up running any time soon!

About Matt Haig

Matt Haig is an author for children and adults. His memoir Reasons to Stay Alive was a number one bestseller, staying in the British top ten for 46 weeks. His children’s book A Boy Called Christmas was a runaway hit and is translated in over 40 languages. It is being made into a film by Studio Canal and The Guardian called it an ‘instant classic’. His novels for adults include the award-winning How To Stop TimeThe Radleys and The Humans.

He won the TV Book Club ‘book of the series’, and has been shortlisted for a Specsavers National Book Award. The Humans was chosen as a World Book Night title. His children’s novels have won the Smarties Gold Medal, the Blue Peter Book of the Year, been shortlisted for the Waterstones Children’s Book Prize and nominated for the Carnegie Medal three times.

You can follow Matt on Twitter @matthaig1. Visit his website for further information and find him on Facebook and Instagram.

The Murder Wheel by Tom Mead

My huge thanks to Poppy Delingpole and Sophie Ransom for inviting me to be part of the launch celebrations for The Murder Wheel by Tom Mead. I’m delighted to share my review today.

Published by Head of Zeus on 12th October 2023, The Murder Wheel is available for purchase here.

The Murder Wheel

1938, London. Young lawyer Edmund Ibbs has a new client: a woman accused of shooting her husband in the already infamous ‘Ferris Wheel Murder’ case.

The case proves to be a web of conspiracy, and Ibbs himself is accused when a second suspicious death occurs, during a magic act at the crowded Pomegranate Theatre.

Also present at the theatre is Joseph Spector, illusionist turned highly respected sleuth. Spector begins to investigate the mystery, but when another body is discovered later that same night, all evidence points to Ibbs being guilty.

With time against him, and a host of hangers-on all having something to hide, can Spector uncover the guilty party, or will he and Inspector Flint of Scotland Yard conclude that Ibbs is the culprit after all?

My Review of The Murder Wheel

Carla Dean has been arrested for murdering her husband.

Warmly written with wit and oh so clever plotting, The Murder Wheel is an absolute gem of its genre and a joy to read. It’s top notch writing with pitch perfect storytelling and I loved it. As an example of a kind of Golden Age crime writing I think it outshines them all. There literally is a smoking gun and a locked room mystery and all is not as it seems, so that discovering clues along with Edmund Ibbs, Joseph Spector and Inspector Flint makes for huge engagement with the narrative. I loved the evidence cross-referencing in the latter parts of the story. 

The characters are well depicted so that they instantly become people the reader is invested in, enhancing the total enjoyment in reading The Murder Wheel. I loved the way dialogue helped uncover who they are as people, and not having read the first Joseph Spector book, Death and the Conjurer, didn’t detract at all, but has made me determined to catch up with it because I enjoyed The Murder Wheel so much. I also fully appreciated the scope for reencountering some of the characters in future stories even though this narrative is brilliantly and satisfactorily concluded.

Whilst there is a high body count, there’s no gratuitous gore or unnecessary violence so that the reader can relax into the why and how of the crimes rather than having the what of them forced upon them. Tom Mead knows exactly how to engage as he explores means, motive and considerable morality here. The denouement left me wondering just what I might have done with the information he uncovers so that the story resonated long after I’d finished reading it, adding to the enjoyment. 

I loved the title. There’s a physical murder wheel – the Ferris wheel where Carla Dean’s husband has died, but there’s a metaphorical wheel of fortune as characters find their zenith and nadirs and there’s a real sense actions circling back to haunt characters, but you’ll need to read the book to discover them for yourself in this fabulous plotting.

The Murder Wheel is a delicious mystery that keeps one step ahead of the reader’s guesses and is immensely entertaining. I thought it was brilliant and cannot recommend it highly enough. I absolutely loved it.

About Tom Mead

Gods and Monsters – Mythological Poems chosen by Ana Sampson and illustrated by Chris Riddell

I’m not entirely sure which lovely publicist it was who sent me a surprise copy of the children’s poetry book Gods and Monsters – Mythological Poems chosen by Ana Sampson and illustrated by Chris Riddell way back in August, but I was delighted that they did! It’s my absolute pleasure to share my review of Gods and Monsters today.

Published by Macmillan Children’s Books on 14th September 2023, Gods and Monsters – Mythological Poems is available for purchase through the links here.

Gods and Monsters – Mythological Poems

A stunning gift book drawing together mythological poems – classic and brand-new – from around the world, illustrated throughout in black and white by award-winning former children’s laureate Chris Riddell. Compiled by bestselling anthologist Ana Sampson, with an introduction by Natalie Haynes, author of Stone Blind.

People all over the world have always told each other stories. And from the very earliest times, many of these stories were told in verse. This collection of poems includes retellings and reimaginings of Roman, Greek, Egyptian, Norse, Celtic, Aztec, Japanese and Inuit mythology.

You will meet gods, monsters, tricksters, heroes, magical creatures and objects, magicians and spirits including Medusa, Icarus, Loki, Osiris, the Minotaur, Pegasus, Bunyip, Kukulcan, Cerberus, Beowolf and Mjolnir and there are footnotes to shine a light on stories themselves.

Includes poems from Neil Gaiman, W B Yeats, Kae Tempest, Sylvia Plath, Shakespeare, Benjamin Zephaniah, Joseph Coelho and many more. . .

My Review of Gods and Monsters – Mythological Poems

A collection of illustrated poems for older children.

Wow! What a cracker of a poetry book. Gods and Monsters is just the book parents, carers and teachers need to interest even the most reluctant young reader of poetry. It’s fabulous.

The collection is organised into sections and can be dipped into at random, or the poems can be read in the progression from The First Rays of the Sun: Beginnings to The Dark World: Underworlds and Afterlives as they are presented. Readers might like to access the poetry through the alphabetical index of first lines or through the author and translator index too, so that the anthology can surprise and engage in so many ways. The potential for further research (particularly through the occasional footnotes)  into cultural monsters, the different myths and legends and the poets themselves is immeasurable, making this a collection valid far beyond the covers and contents.

Gods and Monsters would be wonderful for schools. I can imagine young readers sharing their own cultural monsters in oral projects perhaps or young writers creating poems to fit into the overarching section titles, with entries like Cream of Fool Iva: A Recipe by Randi Anderson being read alongside the witches brew in Macbeth for example, or any number of the poems being used as a stimulus for longer writing, drama or art. There’s such a range of poetic techniques such as free verse and many kinds of rhyme and structure that young readers could be taught them as a natural part of the enjoyment in reading the poems.

And that’s the greatest success for me of Gods and Monsters. Whilst I find it hard not to think about how I might have used the book when I was an English teacher, that’s not the point. Here we have an eclectic, fascinating selection of poetry to engage, entertain, inspire, revolt, scare – indeed every emotion or response you can think of with something for every reader regardless of age or ability. Add in the fact that these poems are fabulously illustrated by Chris Riddell to bring them alive and uncover and enhance their meaning and Gods and Monsters becomes a fabulous giftbook, or something to retain and dip into at any time for readers of any age from 10 and above.

And for those who still say they don’t read or like poetry? Point them to the introduction by Natalie Haynes so that they realise poetry is another form of story just waiting for them to dive in.

I thought Gods and Monsters was a cracking anthology and really recommend it.

About Ana Sampson

Ana has been editing poetry anthologies since 2009, when I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud and Other Poems you Half-Remember from School was the third bestselling poetry title that year. More recently she has edited two volumes of poetry by women, She is Fierce (an Amazon number one category bestseller) and She Will Soar, a collection of poetry about motherhood, Night Feeds and Morning Songs, and Wonder: The Natural History Museum Poetry Book. She has contributed articles to books including Writers’ Market UK and The Book Lover’s Companion and to newspapers and magazines, and talked about poetry and publishing at literary festivals, bookshop events, at libraries, in schools and online. Ana has also appeared on television and radio talking about books, poetry and teenage diaries. She lives in Surrey with her husband, two daughters, two demanding cats, and far too many books.

For further information, visit Ana’s website and find her on Twitter/X @AnaBooks, and Instagram.

About Chris Riddell

Chris Riddell, the 2015-2017 UK Children’s Laureate, is an accomplished artist and the political cartoonist for the Observer. He has enjoyed great acclaim for his books for children. His books have won a number of major prizes, including the 2001, 2004 and 2016 CILIP Kate Greenaway Medals. Goth Girl and the Ghost of a Mouse won the Costa Children’s Book Award 2013. His work for Macmillan also includes the bestselling Ottoline books, The Emperor of Absurdia, and, with Paul Stewart, the Muddle Earth books, the Scavenger series and the Blobheads series. Chris has been honoured with an OBE in recognition of his illustration and charity work. He lives in Brighton with his family.

For further information, visit Chris’s website, find him on Instagram and Facebook or follow him on Twitter @chrisriddell50

The Fifth Guest by Jenny Knight

I’ve been so lucky to review some cracking books for My Weekly magazine online and today’s is no exception. I’m thrilled to review The Fifth Guest by Jenny Knight.

Published by Harper Collins on 3rd August 20s3, The Fifth Guest is available f0r purchase through the publisher links here.

The Fifth Guest

All of them are guilty of something…

Five friends. One deadly secret.

Five old university friends gather on the eve of their flatmate’s memorial at a beautiful riverside house.

Host Caro is as perfect as always.

Shy, awkward Lily’s now a bestselling author.

Sports hero George loves suburban fatherhood.

Bad-boy Travis only gets his highs from meditation.

And gatecrasher Elle is still a troublemaker.

Estranged for years, they’re finally ready to reminisce over dry martinis and delicious food. But there’s more than that on the menu…

Because each guest is hiding a dark secret about their time at Oxford.

They’re all guilty of something. Is one of them guilty of murder?

My Review of The Fifth Guest

My full review of The Fifth Guest can be found on the My Weekly website here.

However, here I can say that The Fifth Guest is an absolutely brilliant thriller, intelligently written and riveting to read. I thought it was fantastic.

Do visit My Weekly to read my full review here.

About Jenny Knight

Jenny Knight studied English literature at university before going on to work in journalism and the publishing industry. For many early mornings alongside this Jenny coached rowing – a job that inspired the initial idea for her debut crime novel, The Fifth Guest (which includes a power battle for the last seat in the Oxford boat for the Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race.)

Jenny lives in South West London with her husband, son and a black and white cat, Larry.

Before writing crime novels, Jenny wrote bestselling women’s fiction under the pseudonym Jenny Oliver. Her books were twice nominated for the RNA Best Contemporary Fiction award. Jenny also wrote the young adult series, Chelsea High.

For further information, follow Jenny on Twitter/X @JKnightAuthor and find her on Instagram.

Wild Hope by Donna Ashworth

When I returned from holiday in August I was delighted to find a surprise copy of Wild Hope by Donna Ashworth waiting for me. My enormous thanks to Flora Willis at Bonnier for sending it my way. It’s my pleasure to share my review of Wild Hope today. 

Wild Hope was published by Black & White publishing on 26th September 2023 and is available for purchase here.

Wild Hope

Wild Hope is Donna Ashworth’s powerful new collection of wisdom to help us find hope, peace, self-acceptance and inspiration on the days we feel worn down, helpless or sad. Written with love and understanding, Donna reminds us that amidst our daily struggles and constant outpourings of bad news we have so much to hope for, and that every one of us can play a part, big or small, in making the world a better place. 

With poems such as ‘Surrounded by Treasure’, ‘That Thing You Do’, ‘Through the Wringer’ and ‘Rope Ladder’, Donna helps us to remember that most people in this world are good, and that acts of kindness and love within our individual spheres of influence, however small, all contribute to a better future. She also gently guides us, no matter how busy or overburdened we may be, to practice better self-care and self-acceptance.

Hope exists when nothing else can. On the darkest of days Wild Hope will help you find more light.

My Review of Wild Hope

A collection of writing about the power of hope.

I’m going to be totally honest and say that Wild Hope is by no means the most literary collection of writing you can encounter. Donna Ashworth is no metaphysical John Donne. And that is the absolute beauty of Wild Hope. It is completely accessible, uplifting and supportive. You don’t need to have a higher degree in literary criticism to feel connected to the writing here, to feel as if Donna Ashworth is speaking directly to you and offering hope when at times it may feel completely elusive. 

Certainly there are literary techniques in the collection that will satisfy those who enjoy them. The use of italics for emphasis, enjambement to illustrate the passing of time perhaps, or the use of the pronoun ‘you’ to draw in the reader are all present in the writing, but they are secondary, used unselfconsciously as Donna Ashcroft writes completely from the heart. Throughout the collection she conveys hope as a kind of emotional kintsugi that allows the reader to find their own peace and beauty in themselves and in the world around them. This is such a supportive collection.

Whilst much of the writing appealed to me completely (and I do think this is a collection that might resonate with women most) and I could quote from so many pieces to exemplify, one entry in particular stood out in its entirety and that was With Your Knowing – but you’ll have to read Wild Hope to discover it for yourself. Let me just say that it’s a poem I’ve earmarked for my uncertain future. 

Wild Hope does exactly what it sets out to do and it does it perfectly. It acknowledges the challenges of life at its darkest moments and helps the reader shine a little light there instead. I thought it was completely lovely. 

About Donna Ashworth

Donna Ashworth is a Sunday Times bestselling author and a lover of words who lives happily in the hills of Scotland with her husband, two sons, and Brian and Dave (the dogs). Donna started her social media accounts in 2018 and is astounded daily by the international reach her words have garnered. “My dream was to connect with women all over the world, so we could look at each other and say I see you, this is hard and just generally agree that imperfection is to be celebrated not feared.” When she is not writing, Donna loves to eat, be merry and laugh; believing these to be the best medicines life can offer.

For further information, find Donna on Instagram and follow her on X/Twitter @Donna_ashworth.

Featuring The Cradle Will Fall by Luke Murphy

It’s a while since Luke Murphy was last here on Linda’s Book Bag, when we stayed in together to chat about two of Luke’s books, Kiss and Tell and Finders Keepers. Today, I’m privileged to be able to share details of Luke’s latest book The Cradle Will Fall.

Let’s find out more:

The Cradle Will Fall

A rogue cop…

When the FBI refuses to acknowledge the disappearance of Agent Matt Stone during a covert investigation overseas, Detective Charlene Taylor has no choice but to go on the hunt. The Ukraine can be unforgiving to outsiders, but the detective has no idea just how deep the corruption runs.

A renegade PI…

There is only one person Charlene can turn to. Trusted friend and former leg-breaker, Calvin Watters, is a protector, and the only man who can go head-to-head with the danger that awaits them. Charlene must put her faith in Calvin, and hope that, together, they can find a way to uncover the truth surrounding the missing Americans.

Can Charlene and Calvin team up one more time to overcome an evil syndicate of corrupt cops, and a government conspiracy covered-up by an entire country?

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Doesn’t that sound exciting? It’s not just me that thinks so either. Here’s what other readers have said:

“Luke Murphy’s The Cradle Will Fall is one part thriller, one part social commentary, and one part international caper and one part. Brutish, funny, compelling and revelatory all at once.”—Anthony Bidulka, winner of the 2023 Best Crime Novel Award.

The Cradle Will Fall is a well-researched potpourri of mystery, danger and intrigue—a fast read that sticks with you long after you turned the last page.”—Cheryl Kaye Tardif, bestselling author of Children of the Fog.

“Don’t miss this entertaining read in a unique setting of a cold environment.”—Dianna T. Benson, award-winning and international bestselling author of The Hidden Son.

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Published on 30th September 2023, The Cradle Will Fall is available for purchase here.

About Luke Murphy

 

Luke Murphy is the International bestselling author of two series: The Calvin Watters Mysteries and The Charlene Taylor Mysteries.

Luke played six years of professional hockey before retiring in 2006. His sports column, “Overtime” (Pontiac Equity), was nominated for the 2007 Best Sports Page in Quebec, and won the award in 2009. He has also worked as a radio journalist (CHIPFM 101.7).

Luke Murphy lives in Shawville, QC with his wife and three daughters. He is a teacher who holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Marketing, and a Bachelor of Education (Magna Cum Laude).

For more information on Luke and his books, and to sign up for his newsletter, visit his website, and find him on Facebook and Instagram. You can also follow Luke on Twitter/X @AuthorLMurphy.

Be the first to know when Luke Murphy’s next book is available! Follow him on BookBub to receive new release and discount alerts.

The Week Junior Book Awards 2023

One of the reasons I became a book blogger was because, many moons ago in a different life, I used to read and review children’s books for Hodder and Stoughton to recommend those that would make great KS3 or middle grade readers for classroom use. I even wrote the classroom resources for many of them.

Consequently, I love to include children’s fiction on Linda’s Book Bag, so it is an absolute delight to be able to celebrate The Week Junior’s first ever children’s book awards.

The Week Junior Book Awards 2023

The UK’s most influential children’s magazine has announced the nine winners of its first children’s book awards. On 2nd October, The Week Junior Book Awards 2023, sponsored by Bookily from National Book Tokens and in partnership with The Bookseller and World Book Day, were celebrated at a ceremony at London’s County Hall. Guests from across the UK children’s publishing industry came together to applaud the uplifting, enriching, and life-enhancing power of books to change children’s lives, and the talented people who create them.

The inaugural awards were chaired by Editorial Director of The Week Junior, Anna Bassi, who said: “Our wonderful – and thoroughly deserving – winning titles represent a broad and fascinating spectrum of topics, genres and voices, but what they all have in common is their absolute power to captivate, entertain and inform young readers. The judges were unanimous in their decisions and I feel privileged to celebrate the success of the authors, illustrators and publishers whose brilliant books bring such pleasure to children, and help form a love of reading that will have benefits for the rest of their lives.”

Deciding the Awards

Each category was judged by a panel of experts, with judges including children’s TV presenter Radzi Chinyanganya, presenter and YouTuber Maddie Moate, and award-winning authors Frank Cottrell-Boyce and Elle McNicoll. The awards were set up at the start of 2023, to address the lack of critical discourse around children’s literature and shine a light on the brilliant work of both new and established children’s authors. Radzi Chinyanganya, said: “There were so many brilliant titles throughout the Younger Non-Fiction category all touching on such important themes. However, Poppy O’Neill’s The Extraordinary Book That Makes You Feel Happy was superb, simultaneously as practical as it is engrossing. With its beautiful illustrations and easy-to-digest and practical takeaways, it is an absolutely super resource for any child or parent of a child who is struggling with low confidence, anxiety or sadness.”

Maddie Moate, said: “It was an honour to judge the Children’s Book of the Year: STEM award, a category full of such great titles and tough competition. However, Rob Lloyd Jones’s 24 Hours in Space was just fantastic – a gripping story that also wove in lots of facts and information for children to absorb. From start to finish, it was such a clever concept, and the graphic novel format was brilliant. It’s the kind of book all children should read.“

A. M. Dassu, said: “Non-fiction books were my first love growing up, so it felt serendipitous to be asked to judge the Older Non-Fiction category! My fellow judges and I were so impressed by the inaugural shortlist, however, our winner, Real Life Dragons and Their Stories of Survival, surpassed the criteria. This book offers an original perspective to the subject and provides easily digestible facts which are beautifully presented, resulting in a satisfying reading experience. My daughter and I both loved it!”

Frank Cottrell-Boyce, said: “We had a really tough time deciding the winner of the Breakthrough category. It was encouraging to see so many of the titles had real ambition and a spirit of adventure. Also to see such a thrilling diversity of characters taking off on adventures in history, detection and super-heroism! In the end, we’ve gone for a book full of breezy wit and invention set in a particularly exciting part of our history.”

The Winners

Science, animals and the environment were at the heart of a number of the winning titles, including Audio Adventures: Natural Wonders of the World (Ladybird), written by Sidra Ansari and brilliantly narrated by actor Ben Bailey-Smith. The book takes listeners on a sound-filled journey through the natural world and beat stiff competition including comedian Richard Ayoade’s The Book That No One Wanted to Read, to win Children’s Audiobook of the Year. The judges described it as “exceptional” and a great example of how publishers should embrace audio.

Children’s Audiobook of the Year

Fearless explorer Otto (voiced by actor Ben Bailey-Smith) and Missy, the smartest raven in the universe, take readers on a journey of discovery across the globe to learn about the seven wonders of the world, and how we can all protect them.

Sidra Ansari is a teacher, author and freelance author, who has always dreamt of being a children’s author. Ansara has written six titles for LadyBird Education and is currently editing her women’s fiction novel after The Novelry awarded her a bursary to study on
The Big Edit Course. Her non-fiction book for adults, Finding Peace Through Prayer and Love (Beacon Books) was published in early 2021 and won the Golden Door Bronze.

Children’s Book of the Year: Older Non-Fiction (9-12 year-olds)

Anita Ganeri, the critically acclaimed author of the Horrible Geography series, won the Older Fiction award with Real Life Dragons and Their Stories of Survival (Wayland). The title explores the fascinating stories of ten real-life dragons and the myths and legends surrounding them.

For centuries, dragons have captured our imaginations, guarding troves of treasure and breathing out fire. But how many children realise that dragons still exist today? While there is no such thing as a fire-breathing dragon, this book brings together the stories of ten real-life dragons, from Komodo dragons to dragon snakes.

Anita Ganeri is a critically acclaimed British Indian author, best-known for her Horrible Geography series, which led her to become Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. She graduated from University of Cambridge and worked in publishing before becoming
a writer. She has written over 600 non-fiction books.

Children’s Book of the Year: STEM

Meanwhile Rob Lloyd Jones’s 24 Hours In Space won Children’s Book of the Year: STEM (in association with The Week Junior Science+Nature magazine).

Join an astronaut for a day as she goes on her first ever spacewalk, and new crew members arrive. How do you eat and drink at zero gravity? How do space toilets work? What are space suits designed for?

Rob Lloyd Jones is an American British writer and is the author of more than thirty books. His debut Wild Boy was nominated for the Carnegie Award and named one of the five best debut novels in the Branford Boase Award.

Younger Fiction Award

Mystery and adventure stories proved popular, with winners including Serena Patel’s Anisha, Accidental Detective: Holiday Adventure (Usborne), which won the Younger Fiction category.

The Mistrys are off on holiday – but there’s never any time to relax for Anisha, Accidental Detective. When the holiday park’s mascot, Delilah the duck, is destroyed and Anisha’s new friend, Cleo, is the number one suspect, Anisha must do whatever it takes to prove her innocence.

Serena Patel is a children’s author, best known for her multi-award winning series, Anisha, Accidental Detective, first published in 2020. Awards include the Sainsbury’s Childrens Book Award for Fiction 2020 and The CrimeFest Award for Children’s Crime
Fiction 2020.

Children’s Book of the Year: Breakthrough, supported by World Book Day

Author J. T. Williams won the exciting Children’s Book of the Year: Breakthrough, supported by World Book Day, with The Lizzie and Belle Mysteries: Drama and Danger (Farshore), the first in a new adventure series set in the 18th century, featuring characters inspired by real Black British historical figures.

Set in 18th century London, Lizzie Sancho and her friend Dido Belle try to work out the mystery of who is threatening to murder Lizzie’s father, Ignatius, before his debut performance on the West End stage.

J. T. Williams studied English Literature at University of Cambridge, before becoming a primary school teacher. Since leaving teaching, she’s been a programme manager at the Royal African Society, leading creative writing school workshops for the literature festival, Africa Writes. The Lizzie and Belle Mysteries is her debut children’s series.

Children’s Book of the Year: Older Fiction (9-12 year-olds)

The award for older fiction went to Tyger, the “triumph of a novel” by SF Said and illustrated by Dave McKean (David Fickling Books).

This is a dark and magical story about two children who find a mythical creature – a Tyger – in a rubbish dump in London – set in the near future of the 21st Century. An altered, dark London, where the Tyger is in danger and our protagonists Adam and Zadie are driven to save the Tyger, and in the process save London too.

SF Said is a British Muslim author, born in Bierut and raised in London. After graduating from the University of Cambridge, he worked as press attaché and speech writer for the Crown Prince of Jordan. Tyger is SF Said’s fourth children’s book.

Children’s Illustrated Book of the Year

Author and illustrator Aoife Dooley won Children’s Illustrated Book of the Year for Frankie’s World, a graphic novel starring an autistic protagonist. Judges praised the book’s “engaging, accessible illustrations and really welcome message about being yourself”. They also noted the high calibre of illustrations across the winning titles, created by talent from across the globe, including Jianan Liu from China and Caribay M. Benavides from Buenos Aires.

Frankie believes she is an alien; she is the smallest person in her class – and she is accused of talking too much. But really, all she is is different – neurodivergent, though it is not until nearly the end of the book that Frankie gets an insight into why she views things differently.

Aoife Dooley is an award-winning illustrator, author and comedian from Ireland, who is best known for her series Your One Nikita, which came to screens for RTE Player animated in 2019. In 2018, she was diagnosed as autistic at the age of 27. Frankie’s World is a graphic novel based on Aoife’s real-life experiences of having undiagnosed autism as a child, and the emotions she felt for always feeling different from her peers.

Children’s Book of the Year: Younger Non-Fiction (6-9 year-olds)

Focussing on mental health, a vital topic in children’s publishing, The Extraordinary Book That Makes You Feel Happy (Weldon Owen Children’s Books) by Poppy O’Neill was awarded Children’s Book of the Year: Younger Non-Fiction (6-9 year-olds). This innovative book includes a foreword from mindfulness expert Wynne Kinder, and details projects, ideas and activities to help children feel positive, confident, focused, calm and included.

The Extraordinary Book that Makes You Feel Happy is for every child, with a host of projects, ideas and activities to help them to feel positive, confident, focused, calm, relaxed, inclusive and included. The activities help young children to build resilience to big, overwhelming feelings and to feel connected to themselves and to others.

Poppy O’Neill is an author specializing in children and parental mental health and emotions. She lives in Sussex with her wife, children and pets. Her previous books include, Mother Power, To Help Your Anxious Child and I Like Being Me: A Child’s Guide to Self-Worth.

Children’s Book Cover of the Year

The Week Junior invited readers to help choose the Children’s Book Cover of the Year. Thousands of kids cast their votes online, and Rob Biddulph’s Peanut Jones and the Twelve Portals was propelled into first place. The Week Junior’s Art Director, Dave Kelsall, described the book as: “A highly imaginative, colourful and ‘in-your-face’ cover that grabs your attention immediately”.

Some legends are born, some are drawn . . . Famous works of art are disappearing from all over the world. One moment they are there, the next, they have crumbled to dust. Peanut Jones and her friends suspect it might have something to do with the magical
world of Chroma and the wicked Mr White’s plot to wipe out colour, art and creativity. It’s time to head back to the Illustrated City and help the resistance fight back. This title, by the uber-creative creator of the #DrawWithRob draw-along video series active during the COVID-19 pandemic, fizzes with magic, danger, friendship and art.

Rob Biddulph is a bestselling and multi award-winning author/illustrator. He is the author of many highly, acclaimed, award-winning picture books, including Blown Away, GRRRRR!, Odd Dog Out, Sunk, Kevin, Show and Tell, Dog Gone and the Dinosaur Juniors series. Before he became a full-time author/illustrator Rob was the art director of the Observer Magazine, NME, Uncut, SKY and Just Seventeen. He lives in London with his wife and three daughters.

The Week Junior Book Festival

Audiences will have the chance to see some of the award winners, including the Breakthrough winner, J. T. Williams, and Younger Fiction winner Serena Patel at The Week Junior Book Festival, which will take place during the school halfterm on 24th October in London. They will be joined by best-selling authors, such as Michael Morpurgo, Michael Rosen and Jenny Pearson.

For further information about The Week Junior Book Awards, visit the website.

For The Week Junior Book Festival, please click here!

About The Week Junior

The Week Junior is a multi award-winning magazine packed full of engaging articles, eye-catching images and big ideas that get eight to 14-year-olds reading, thinking and talking. It features everything from current affairs, to sport, science, cooking and craft. With 32 fact-packed pages, The Week Junior feeds children’s natural curiosity, encourages critical thinking and promotes reading for pleasure with a dedicated books section and annual Summer of Reading challenge.

For further information, visit the website and find The Week Junior on Facebook, Twitter/x @theweekjunior and Instagram.