Staying In With Gayle Carline

Murder Bytes

One of the frustrations of being a book blogger is that there simply isn’t time to read all the wonderful books. However, that doesn’t stop me finding out about them and I’m delighted to welcome Gayle Carline to Linda’s Book Bag today to tell me about the latest book in her Peri Minneopa Mysteries.

Staying in with Gayle Carline

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag GayleThank 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?

Murder Bytes

It’s Murder Bytes, the 5th book in my Peri Minneopa Mystery series. Peri Minneopa is a 50ish woman who left her successful housecleaning business to get her license as a private investigator. Her plan was to do surveillance, background checks, all the boring stuff. Instead, she investigates murders and gets into a little danger now and then.

I understand that Murder Bytes is out today so happy publication day Gayle. What can we expect from an evening in with Murder Bytes?

When you spend time with Peri, you’re with a sassy, stubborn woman who will do things that frighten the pants off her, just to solve a case. This case involves cyber-crime, and trying to keep her brother out of trouble. Reviewers have compared Peri to an older version of Stephanie Plum, and BookLife Reviews says “This is a satisfying mystery that will leave readers eager for Peri’s next investigation.”

I think Peri sounds my kind of woman!

What else have you brought along and why?

guitar

Peri likes 70s guitars, so she’s either got Clapton or Stevie Ray Vaughn pounding in her ears when she goes jogging. She also likes old movies, good wine, margaritas, and chocolate. Her assistant, Benny Needles is a Dean Martin fanatic.

dean martin

Yes, I’m using the entire word here—fanatic. So naturally there’s room for Dino to croon in the mix. The gang hits quite a few local Orange County restaurants here and there, and one famous LA spot—Musso and Frank’s in Hollywood. Now I’m hungry just thinking about it!

It sounds like a musical evening ahead. Thanks for staying in with me Gayle. You turn up the volume and I’ll tell readers a little bit more about Murder Bytes.

Murder Bytes

Murder Bytes

In this fifth and final installment of the Peri Minneopa Mysteries, Peri has had enough. She’s closing her business, marrying her detective boyfriend, and settling down to a life of ease–until her brother shows up, accused of a murder he swears he didn’t commit.

Now she’s back in the thick of things, investigating the death of an engineer who may have been stealing techno-secrets from other companies. Her relationship with her brother is an icy one, at best, and she struggles with her ambivalence, as well as her desire to leave investigative work behind.

Digging around in people’s lives is reasonably easy, but when the bullets start flying, will Peri be able to keep her promise?

Murder Bytes is available for purchase here and you’ll find the whole series here.

About Gayle Carline

Gayle Carline - author photo

Gayle Carline is a typical Californian, meaning that she was born somewhere else. She moved to Orange County from Illinois in 1978 and landed in Placentia a few years later. Carline began writing journalistic pieces for California Riding Magazine, then quickly added the title “humor columnist” to her resume with a weekly column in her local newspaper, the Placentia News-Times. What she really wanted to do was write mysteries, however, so in 2009 she crossed that off her list with the first of her Peri Minneopa mysteries. In her spare time, Carline likes to sit down with friends and laugh over a glass of wine. And maybe plan a little murder and mayhem for the next novel.

You can find out more by visiting Gayle’s website. You can follow Gayle in Twitter too @GayleCarline.

Jasper Viking Dog by Hilary Robinson

jasper viking dog

My enormous thanks to Strauss House and the team at StonehillSalt PR for a surprise copy of children’s book Jasper: Viking Dog by Hilary Robinson, illustrated by Lewis James. I have previously met Jasper here when I reviewed Hilary’s Jasper: Space Dog so I was delighted to have the opportunity to see what else he’d been getting up to. It was also lovely to find myself quoted in this new book and on the back cover too!

I also loved Peace Lily by Hilary Robinson, reviewed here, that it was one of my top three books in 2018.

Jasper:Viking Dog is published today 13th February 2020 and is available for purchase in all good bookshops and online including here.

Jasper Viking Dog

jasper viking dog

Jasper believes he may descend from a long line of Viking dogs and is keen to help out at the local Viking Museum.

The second book in the Misadventures of Jasper series, see Jasper, Charlie Tanner and Astrid the Curator, explore interesting and hilarious ways in which Jasper might help to attract visitors.

The Jasper series includes several features which may help those who find aspects of reading challenging. The stories include dyslexic font, tinted pages, graphics and text layout considerations to help engage reluctant, emergent and enthusiastic readers.

My Review of Jasper: Viking Dog

Jasper is off on another adventure.

Having previously read and reviewed Jasper: Space Dog I knew that Hilary Robinson’s Jasper: Viking Dog would have all the elements needed to engage and support reluctant readers and emerging independent readers. Indeed, there is an accessible font, plenty of white space so that the amount of text isn’t daunting, and a great balance of super illustrations from Lewis James to retain interest and break up the text. The manner in which Jasper: Viking Dog opens and the epistolary format echoes that of Jasper: Space Dog so that children are able to recognise the style and attune themselves more easily to reading which is hugely important to those struggling with reading.

In Jasper: Viking Dog, Hilary Robinson uses humour to engage readers brilliantly. Parrot’s interjections and Jasper’s misunderstanding of homonyms like mousse and moose and the thought of a camel doing long jump in the next Olympics will all appeal to young readers. I’m certain the inclusion of information about Viking poo will make many young readers smile.

Whilst I love the entertaining story in its own right, I love the potential that arises in Jasper: Viking Dog even more. The book is perfect in promoting literacy and reading, especially through the inclusion of Norse words in our language and the accessibility of the text, but numeracy is supported through the coins, the timelines and dates so that there is something for every parent, teacher and child to explore. There’s opportunity here to discuss language, history, sport and geography, so that the book is valuable beyond the enjoyment of the story. Jasper: Viking Dog is another cracker of a children’s book from Hilary Robinson.

About Hilary Robinson

hilary r

Hilary Robinson is an author, radio producer, broadcaster and feature writer. She was born in Devon and brought up in Nigeria and England. The author of over forty books for children she is best known for Mixed Up Fairy Tales. Her books have been translated into a number of languages and are sold across the world. She lives and works in London and Yorkshire.

You can follow Hilary on Twitter @HilsRobinson and visit her website for more information. You can also follow Jasper on Twitter @jasper_space!

My One True North by Milly Johnson

My one true north

With February designated Romance Reading Month in celebration of #RNA60, the Romantic Novelist Association’s 60th birthday celebrations, what better time to review My One True North by Milly Johnson? The RNA has just awarded Milly their Outstanding Achievement Award which she’ll be receiving on 2nd March. You can read all about this much deserved award for Milly here.

I always enjoy Milly’s books and most recently reviewed her The Magnificent Mrs Mayhew here. Milly was kind enough to write a piece for Linda’s Book Bag when The Mother of All Christmases was released in a post available here and I have my review of another of Milly’s books, The Perfectly Imperfect Womanhere.

My enormous thanks to Sara-Jade at Simon and Schuster for allowing me read an early copy of My One True North.

My One True North will be released by Simon and Schuster on 5th March 2020 and is available for pre-order through the links here.

My One True North

My one true north

Laurie and Pete should never have met.
But fate has pushed them together for a reason.

Six months ago, on the same night, Laurie and Pete both lost their partners. Struggling to manage the grief, they join the same counselling group – and meet each other.

From their sadness, Pete and Laurie find happiness growing and they sense a fresh new beginning. Except, the more they talk, the more they begin to spot the strange parallels in their stories.

Then Pete discovers a truth that changes everything.

But, as surely as a compass points north, some people cannot be kept apart.

My One True North is a story of friendship and what love means, of secrets uncovered, teashops on corners and the northern lights.

My Review of My One True North

Grief brings more change for Pete and Laurie than they might imagine.

Before I review My One True North properly, I have to say that I think this book is Milly Johnson at her absolute finest. I always enjoy her writing but My One True North seems to have that extra magical ingredient that makes it a joyous book to read in spite of the sadness that is the catalyst for the story. I absolutely loved it.

The plot is fabulous. The compass references leading North work so well, drawing the reader along with the narrative. It’s no plot spoiler to say there will be a happy ending – this is Milly Johnson writing – by my goodness, the twists and turns getting there are totally entertaining and wonderfully realistic. So many secrets swirl through the pages that it’s fascinating to see how the story will be resolved. At the moments when sadness seems almost overwhelming, the subplot elements from the newspaper where Laurie works bring glorious comic relief so that I laughed aloud even as I had tears in my eyes. Milly Johnson makes her readers experience the full gamut of emotion, from grief to joy, sadness to laughter, fear and frustration to comfort and satisfaction so that reading My One True North is an emotional roller-coaster.

I thought the characterisation was exemplary too. Through Pete especially we see how grief can knock us out of alignment, but all those present in My One True North are warm, vivid people who are all the more realistic for their flaws and life experiences. I thought the way Alex and Tara were presented was perfectly poised because although I couldn’t forgive them the hurt they created, I could understand them fully. Again, I experienced a full spectrum of emotion in my responses to all the characters because of the quality of the writing. I wanted Pete and Laurie to be happy and felt protective of them. I loathed Reid and Cora to the extent that I’d happily have done them physical damage. I wanted to attend Molly’s tea shop and have her as my friend. I found myself thinking about the people in My One True North when I wasn’t reading about them which I think illustrates how real they became to me.

However, it was the themes of My One True North that made this such a warm, humane and enveloping book. There’s a gritty realism that shows just how we are affected by loss and grief. It is as if Milly Johnson has glimpsed into the soul of humanity and is reassuring us that we can break down, we can rage and we can behave appallingly and yet, or rather because, we are still human and still deserve happiness. Friendship and love, passion and anger, grief and joy, betrayal and loyalty, all weave through the pages of this lovely book. The added extra of a little bit of mysticism alongside these more familiar themes makes for a really wonderful read.

I loved My One True North. It’s realistic, entertaining, emotional, funny and ultimately uplifting. What more could a reader ask?

About Milly Johnson

milly

Milly Johnson was born, raised and still lives in Barnsley, South Yorkshire. As well as being a prolific author, she is also a copywriter for the greetings card industry, a joke-writer, a columnist, after dinner speaker, poet, BBC newspaper reviewer, and a sometimes BBC radio presenter.

She won the RoNA for Best Romantic Comedy Novel of 2014 and 2016 and the Yorkshire Society award for Arts and Culture 2015. Milly has recently been awarded the RNA Outstanding Achievement Award.

She writes about love, life, friendships and that little bit of the magic that sometimes crops up in real life. She likes owls, cats, meringues, handbags and literary gifts – but hates marzipan. She is very short.

You can follow Milly on Twitter @millyjohnson and Facebook.

Milly has an excellent website too where you can sign up for her brilliant monthly newsletter with exclusive, news, offers and competitions.

An @Bookollective Interview with Douglas Renwick, Author of Traumata

Traumata cover

It’s not often that I feature an interview I haven’t personally conducted on Linda’s Book Bag, but I’m breaking my own self-imposed rules today to let the lovely folk at Bookollective interview Douglas Renwick, author of Traumata because I simply couldn’t find time to read Traumata for review or interview Douglas myself but I really like the sound of the book.

Traumata is available for purchase here.

Traumata

Traumata cover

In Khuh Tabar, high up in foothills of the Hindu Kush, a young Englishwoman watches her husband and son murdered. Two years later, she returns to England, still traumatised by the memory. Her grief turns to rage when she finds out the killer walks free. Will she honour the ancient code of the Pashtuns and avenge the deaths, risking a life sentence for murder? Or will she abide by the laws of her homeland and live with her anger for ever?

A Bookollective Interview with Douglas Renwick

First off, who is your perfect reader?

I aim my books at intelligent people who like to expand their knowledge of some of the more controversial issues of our time. A Balance of Evil was about the doctrine of necessity; The Gathering looked at the ethics of organ transplant.

I like to do this in an entertaining way within a feasible plot with a satisfactory ending. My perfect reader is one who guesses the denouement a page or two before it’s revealed. I hope my novels appeal equally to all sexes.

What books are on your bedside table?

Daughter of Time, a novel written by Josephine Tey in 1935 about Richard III which showed he was not the wicked uncle of history books: conspiracy theories and fake news are nothing new.

The Spy and the Traitor, by Ben Macintyre.

Mythos, by Stephen Fry

When you wrote Traumata, did you have a writing routine?

Not really. I’m an early riser so on most of my mornings when I’m at home I write for a couple of hours. But writing is also about thinking and I do that anywhere at any time. My problem is dragging myself away from my desk and doing other things, like sweeping the leaves off the drive or mowing the lawn.

Where do you write best?

In my study in France. We have a chalet in the mountains and I love being at altitude surrounded by the most beautiful views. In the winter, I write before the ski-lifts open, then do a bit of thinking in the telecabine on the way up.

Where did your inspiration for Traumata come from?

Some years ago I met a female RAF doctor who was stationed in Afghanistan and had a hard time.

What are your hopes for reader’s to take away from reading Traumata?

That justice means different things to different people, and that in this country (UK) we don’t necessarily have it right. In trying to do three things – deter, punish and protect the public – prison fails in all three. Our judicial system is broken.

What are you working on next?

A psychological thriller about a young girl with special powers, having been born in her caul. Damning evidence shows she has committed a terrible crime, but as she is below the age of legal responsibility she is denied any form of trial and ends up in care.

About Douglas Renwick

me at mill3

According to his British passport, Douglas Renwick’s occupation for many years was ‘Government Service’. This included spells in Libya, Malta, Cyprus, Ireland and Germany. He also worked at the Ministry of Defence in London, the Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Powers in Europe in Belgium, the Pentagon in Washington DC, and White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.

He has spent time in East Berlin, Mexico, Guatemala, Ecuador, Argentina, Egypt, Kenya, Namibia, South Africa, Burma, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam. He has jumped out of planes, swum across Valetta harbour, skied across the Alps and the Rockies, and been transferred by breeches buoy from one Royal Navy ship to another, at sea and under full steam. He has been down a coal-mine in Yorkshire, a salt-mine in Poland and a nuclear bunker in Essex.

Now a grandfather, retired and living in Kent, time allows him to commit some of his experiences to paper. He prefers writing fiction on the grounds that it is safer.

Traumata tour poster

The Aftermath by Rhidian Brook

the aftermath

I’m delighted that this month I’ve actually managed to read the book for the U3A reading group to which I belong. Our choice this time was The Aftermath by Rhidian Brook and I’m looking forward to our group discussions and to finding out what everyone else thought.

Published by Penguin, The Aftermath is available for purchase through the publisher links here.

The Aftermath

the aftermath

In the bitter winter of 1946, Rachael Morgan arrives in the ruins of Hamburg. Here she is reunited with her husband Lewis, a British colonel charged with rebuilding the shattered city.

As they set off for their new home Rachael is stunned to discover that Lewis has made an extraordinary decision: they will be sharing the grand house with its previous owners, a German widower and his troubled daughter.

In this charged atmosphere, enmity and grief give way to passion and betrayal.

My Review of The Aftermath

Rachel’s arrival in Hamburg may not be the glorious reunion with husband Lewis they might hope for.

It took me a while to tune in to The Aftermath. Initially I wasn’t sure I was going to enjoy it because it is a very intense, almost intimate, read that needed my full attention when my brain was occupied elsewhere. I think it says a great deal about the quality of Rhidian Brook’s writing that he drew me in and captivated me as a reader almost in spite of myself so that I thoroughly enjoyed, or rather, appreciated, The Aftermath as it is quite a disturbing book in many ways. I have found myself thinking about it long after I’ve finished reading it. I did find it challenging at times, having to drag up my O’Level German and look up some vocabulary but I think that adds to the book’s success. This wasn’t an easy period as different nationalities had to adjust and work together so some challenge in the reading is a perfect indication of that period in history. I thought the overall quality of the prose was masterful.

The description of post-war Hamburg is devastatingly vivid making for an often disturbing and disquieting sensation as I read. Ozi’s apparel in particular gave me a greater insight into the time than any factual history has managed, so that I had an understanding of events at a very individual level. I’d defy anyone to read The Aftermath and not be altered or moved by it or to learn from it. I experienced several sensations, from an underlying fear for Lewis and Edmund in particular, to loathing of some of the military characters, sadness for many, including the Trummerkinder, and an early contempt for Rachel, despite her loss, that transformed into understanding and, ultimately, admiration. Indeed, it is Rhidian Brook’s ability to manipulate me as a reader that is so skilful and that I found highly effective.

I loved the title. There are numerous ‘aftermaths’ reverberating through the plot and themes. To say too much would spoil the plot, but the aftermaths of war, separation, loss, guilt, infidelity, action and inaction, need and desire all form a maelstrom of meaning that I’m still contemplating. So often I found myself wondering what I might have done, or how I might have behaved and my answers were not always comfortable ones. It’s this insight into humanity that I found so intense and thought provoking.

Having begun The Aftermath not fully engaged and wondering if I would complete it, I ended the book filled with admiration for Rhidian Brook’s honed and manipulative prose. I found it atmospheric, captivating and swirling with meaning and emotion. I really recommend The Aftermath.

About Rhidian Brook

rhidian

Rhidian Brook is an award-winning writer of fiction, television drama and film. His first novel, The Testimony of Taliesin Jones, won several prizes including the Somerset Maugham Award. His short stories have appeared in numerous publications, including the Paris Review, New Statesman and Time Out, and have been broadcast on BBC Radio 4. He is also a regular contributor to ‘Thought For The Day’ on the Today programme.

For more information, follow Rhidian on Twitter @Rhidianbrook, visit his website or find him on Facebook.

Staying in with Trevor D’Silva, Author of A Bloody Hot Summer

ABHS- Front Cover

It’s ages since I last spent an evening with Trevor D’Silva chatting all about Fateful Decisions. I’m delighted that Trevor wasn’t put off by staying in with me, but instead has returned to tell me all about his latest book.

So, let’s see what he has to say:

Staying in with Trevor D’Silva

Welcome back to Linda’s Book Bag, Trevor. I’m delighted you were happy to return. Thank you for agreeing to stay in with me once again. 

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

ABHS- Front Cover

I brought along my latest novel – A Bloody Hot Summer, which was released on November 14, 2019.

I chose it, since it will be of interest to people living in the UK, because it is set in England in the 1920s. Even though it is a murder mystery, the novel touches on some history of the British empire. So, you can also call it a historical fiction novel. It is written in British English and has some characters speaking in Cockney and Scottish accents too.

A major portion of the story takes place in England, but there are some chapters where the story takes place in Scotland, India and South Africa. For those who do not speak British English, I’ve added a glossary at the end for people to look up words and terms. Of course, some words are spelled differently and I have pointed that to the readers before the novel begins.

I very much like the sound of A Bloody Hot Summer Trevor. What can we expect from an evening in with it?

A Bloody Hot Summer is a murder mystery set in the summer of 1927 during a heat wave in a small village on the outskirts of London called Meadowford Village.  Hence the unusual title of the book. The lady of Fitzhugh Manor is found brutally murdered after her eightieth birthday party. A young detective called Dermot Lucian Carlyle is tasked with solving the case by his superior in London, because he is holidaying there. This is his first solo case and he’s not very confident of solving it.

Sounds great – very much in the tradition of British crime fiction.

Stuart Nulman, who reviewed the book for the Montreal Times said that the story had an Agatha Christie feel to it. British author Paul Beatty had a similar opinion. Another reviewer from the Wishing Shelf Book Awards felt that it reflected many aspects of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s work within it. Celia Sandys the grand daughter of former British Prime minister Sir Winston Churchill said that my novel is – “A real page turner, full of suspense”.

Wow. What wonderful feedback. You must be delighted.

I was very honoured that the reviewers said that, since the literary works of Dame Agatha Christie and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle inspired me to write my first murder mystery and I’ve mentioned that fact in the Acknowledgements.

Those reviews from the people mentioned above including Sublime Book Review, are on my website. So, please feel free to read them on the pagespecifically for this novel (My novel won the Author Shout Recommended Read Award for 2019. The logo for that is on this page. I recently got the news that I won the Coffee Pot Book Club Award. The logo for this new award will be on this page in February.)

Congratulations. That’s fantastic news.

So, judging from the reviews, you can be sure to have a thrilling evening as we discuss the book.

I think you’re right. What else have you brought along and why?

pie

Well for food, let’s do something very English, shall we? I have brought steak and kidney pie, vegetables and also some sherry.

You can have all the sherry Trevor but I’m happy to eat your share of the pie.

tea

I also brought some Indian tea and we can have it with biscuits after dinner. All these food items are mentioned in my novel, especially the tea (many times).

Now you HAVE enticed me to read A Bloody Hot Summer Trevor. I’m addicted to tea! I’m off to India soon so I shall look forward to drinking proper Indian tea. Thanks so much for staying in with me and telling me all about A Bloody Hot Summer. In the meantime, pass those biscuits whilst I tell everyone a little more about the book: 

A Bloody Hot Summer

ABHS- Front Cover

It’s 1927 and Great Britain is sweltering in an unprecedented heatwave. On the morning after her eightieth birthday party, Lady Fitzhugh is discovered bound and butchered in her bed, with her family and staff the prime suspects…

Whilst holidaying at nearby Meadowford Village, Detective Dermot Carlyle is asked to help investigate the brutal murder. The clues all point to a robbery gone wrong, but Dermot suspects that there is more to the horrific crime. The Fitzhughs’ secrets take Dermot along a path linking some of the biggest events of the British Colonial Empire – from India to Africa, to the dark days of the Great War itself.

As more murders take place, Dermot is racing against time to discover the killer’s identity. What are the family hiding, why did Lady Fitzhugh have to die, and what horror was committed in the colonies that led to this trail of death and deceit?

Published by Black Rose on 12th November 2019, A Bloody Hot Summer is available for purchase here and directly from the publisher here.

About Trevor D’Silva

thumbnail_IMG_0581_dsilva_trevor_small

Trevor D’Silva has several degrees in engineering and accounting. He has lectured in mechanical engineering and environmental science subjects at various colleges. Trevor’s debut novel, Fateful Decisions, a historical fiction, was released in October, 2017. A Bloody Hot Summer is his second novel and first murder mystery. An avid anglophile, Trevor loves all things British and uses his free time to expand his knowledge in history and reading crime, thriller, and mystery novels.

You can visit Trevor’s website for more details, follow him on Twitter @TrevorDAuthor, and find him on Instagram. Trevor is also on Facebook.

Staying in with Ritu Bhathal, Author of Marriage Unarranged

ritu_cover_web.jpg

It’s a real pleasure to be staying in with Ritu Bhathal today to celebrate her latest book Marriage Unarranged as I’ve met Ritu in real life and she’s lovely! My thanks to her for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.

Staying in with Ritu Bhathal

Hi Ritu. Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag. Thank you for agreeing to stay in with me.

Thank you so much for having me, Linda. I am nervously excited!

I think we might just have guessed, but tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening and why have you chosen it? 

ritu_cover_web.jpg

Today, I have brought my new book, Marriage Unarranged. This truly is my book baby, having lovingly created it over the last twenty years. It has reached adult status, age-wise, and now it is time for it to grow wings and fly the nest. Tomorrow, in fact. 9th February 2020 is the release date.

Oh. Happy publication day for tomorrow Ritu! I love that child metaphor you use about getting Marriage Unarranged to publication.  So, what can we expect from an evening in with Marriage Unarranged?

An evening in with Marriage Unarranged will send you on a little journey of your own, visiting India, through Aashi’s eyes, with a look at a slice of India, based here in the UK, in Birmingham.

How exciting. I’m off to India again in March so this could be just the book for me.

You’ll meet a whole host of characters, from Aashi, our main girl, and her protective family, to Kiran, her best friend, and a few others too.

It is a genre I have coined a phrase for – Chickpea Curry Lit – Chick Lit with an Indian twist. You’ll find culture, romance, laughs, and quite possibly, you might learn something new.

That’s just brilliant – Chickpea Curry Lit really needs to catch on!

Oh, and I can’t guarantee it being just an evening… as one of my readers mentioned, “Ritu, do you know what? YOU WROTE A BOOK!!!!! And not just any book, a book that I stayed up past my bedtime reading!”

Now, I don’t want to steal anyone’s sleep, but that particular quote made my week, and I created a meme of it to pin up and encourage myself to carry on writing!

I’m not surprised. You must be delighted with that feedback Ritu.

What else have you brought along and why?

download

Well, I feel it would only be fitting for me to have brought along an Indian themed set of snacks, and music, so for tonight, I have brought my jeera spiced chicken wings, samosas (mild, not overly spicy, provided by my sister in law), homemade pakoras (thank you, mum in law), and some gulab jamuns for something sweet (they are my mum’s recipe). For a truly Indian experience, there would have to be real masala chai, as drunk by the characters in the book, during their trip to India!

If you’re going to bring food like that Ritu, you can come again. I love Indian meals.

You can cook the chicken wings yourself Linda. Here’s the recipe:

Recipe for Jeera Chicken

20 pieces of chicken (wings)
Butter
Olive Oil
Cumin Seeds
Garlic
Ginger
Fresh red chillis
Salt
A Little Natural Yoghurt
Garam Masala
Lemon Juice

Honestly, it is so simple, and really tasty!

  • Add the butter and oil to a wok or large pan and allow to cook together. Both fats together stop each other from burning,
  • Once hot add around two teaspoons of cumin, ginger, garlic, chillis and salt. Allow to cook for a few minutes.
  • Add the chicken, stirring so all the pieces are coated with the spices.
  • Add a tablespoon of natural yoghurt to allow the chicken to keep its moistness.
  • When the chicken is almost cooked, add around two teaspoons of garam masala and a few squirts of lemon juice.
  • Allow the chicken to cook thoroughly.
  • Enjoy!

It’s actually my husband who does most of the cooking these days so I’ll pass this on. We have some chillis from our allotment in the freezer that will come in handy.

The music would be early 2000s Bollywood tracks, and Bhangra – It’s never quiet in my life! Here’s a track from Kaho Na Pyaar Hai, the film mentioned in the book.

It’s certainly got that epic Bollywood feel to it hasn’t it?

India is a wonderful place, filled with culture and colour, so here are a couple of photos from a trip I took out there, a couple of years before the book is set.

They look great Ritu and remind me of being in Mumbai – that’s the Haji Ali Durgah mosque behind you isn’t it?

It is Linda!

It’s been lovely spending this evening with you Ritu. Thank you for staying in with me. You pour the masala chai and I’ll let readers know a bit more about Marriage Unarranged:

Marriage Unarranged

ritu_cover_web.jpg

It all started ended with that box…

Aashi’s life was all set.

Or so she thought.

Like in the Bollywood films, Ravi would woo her, charm her family and they’d get married and live happily ever after.

But then Aashi found the empty condom box…

Putting her ex-fiancé and her innocence behind her, Aashi embarks upon an enlightening journey, to another country, where vibrant memories are created, and unforgettable friendships forged.

Old images erased, new beginnings to explore.

And how can she forget the handsome stranger she meets? A stranger who’s hiding something…

Marriage Unarranged is available for purchase here.

About Ritu Bhathal

Ritu Bhathal

Ritu Bhathal was born in Birmingham in the mid-1970s to migrant parents, hailing from Kenya but with Indian origin. This colourful background has been a constant source of inspiration to her.

From childhood, she always enjoyed reading. This love of books is credited to her mother. The joy of reading spurred her on to become creative in her writing, from fiction to poetry. Winning little writing competitions at school and locally encouraged her to continue writing.

As a wife, mother, daughter, sister, and teacher, she has drawn on inspiration from many avenues to create the poems that she writes.

A qualified teacher, having studied at Kingston University, she now deals with classes of children as a sideline to her writing!

Ritu also writes a blog, www.butismileanyway.com, a mixture of life and creativity, thoughts and opinions, which was awarded first place in the Best Overall Blog Category at the 2017 Annual Bloggers Bash Awards, and Best Book Blog in 2019.

Ritu is happily married and living in Kent, with her Hubby Dearest, and two children, not forgetting the fur baby Sonu Singh.

You can find out more about Ritu by visiting her blog or her website., following her on Twitter @RituBhathal and Instagram or finding her on Facebook.

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Linda’s Book Bag 5th Birthday Giveaway

i am 5

My goodness me! I can’t believe it’s five years ago today that I sent out a tentative blog post into the world and began blogging for the very first time. This post marks my 2,112th blog post!

It’s been an absolute pleasure to become so immersed in the world of books once more. I’ve lost count of the number of bookish events I’ve been invited to, the festivals I’ve been involved with, the authors, publishers and fellow bloggers I’ve met. Many of those people are now friends in real life and it’s a joy to know them. I’ve even reconnected with students I have taught who are now authors and that has been fantastic.

I’ve been sent wonderful books for review, have won awards, been a character in a book, been featured on other blogs and in magazines and have been quoted time and again in books and on the covers. It has been an incredible privilege and very exciting.

The greatest number of physical books I’ve been sent in any one day is 31 and the biggest number of emails asking for reviews or a slot on Linda’s Book Bag on one day is 212 so my apologies if I can’t fulfil all requests.

I’ve even written my own novel – not that I think it will ever see the light of day!

I love it, even when I’m feeling under pressure to try to read something in time for a blog tour or review, or when social media gets in a pickle and annoys me! I’m somewhat ashamed that I haven’t always managed to review as promised but life gets in the way at times. In fact, I have cut right back on blogging, despite appearances, so that I can deal with the everyday aspects of life. My TBR pile never seems to diminish and there are many, many books I still want to read from the 900+ on the shelves, book cases, the floor, in my book trolley, surrounding my desk, next to the bed, under the spare bed, in the wardrobes and amongst the 1200+ on my Kindle.

I WILL read them all eventually…

5th Blog Birthday Giveaway

£20

So, to celebrate five years of blogging, to thank those of you who support Linda’s Book Bag, and to help spread the book love further, I have a small blog birthday giveaway. It’s open internationally and closes at UK midnight on Thursday 13th February 2020.

As I know some readers prefer to buy their books from their local bookshop, the winner might prefer to choose a National Book Token, but the choice could be an Amazon UK or Amazon US voucher. The value is £20 or $20.

For your chance to enter just click here.

Thank you for taking the time to visit my blog, for your support and bookish friendship. Good luck and happy reading!

Tiger Skin Rug by Joan Haig

Tiger Skin Rug

I love reading children’s books and am delighted to be part of the launch celebrations for Tiger Skin Rug by Joan Haig. My enormous thanks to Kelly Macdonald at Cranachan Publishing for inviting me to participate and for sending me a copy of Tiger Skin Rug in return for an honest review.

Published yesterday, 6th February 2020, by Cranachan’s children’s imprint Pokey Hat, Tiger Skin Rug is available for purchase in all the usual places including directly from the publisher here.

Tiger Skin Rug

Tiger Skin Rug

An old promise. A mysterious tiger.
A magical adventure.

Lal and his brother Dilip miss home. They don’t like drizzle, midges, or the tiger skin rug in their creepy new house. All they want is to leave Scotland and go back to India. But that’s before they make friends with Jenny, and before the tiger comes back to life…

The tiger tells them it will take them home in return for their help: it cannot rest until it fulfils an old promise. Can Lal, Dilip and Jenny help it on its quest? Who is trying to stop them? And will they get back home?

Fly into the night with this fabulous tale of adventure, friendship and what it means to find home.

My Review of Tiger Skin Rug

A move from India to Scotland will lead Lal and Dilip on a huge adventure.

Tiger Skin Rug is a fantastic children’s book and I loved every word. Joan Haig has constructed a magical story of peril and adventure that is completely captivating and any child of any age, never mind the 8-12 year old target range, would enjoy it.

The plot is fast paced and exciting as the children have riddles to solve, enemies to outwit and a tiger’s promise to keep. There’s magical tiger rides, mythology and the more mundane all blended into an enthralling and perfectly balanced story.

The wonderful sense of place, in both Lal and Dilip’s new Scottish home and in the descriptions of India, is so vivid and colourful that I felt transported, and my understanding of India in particular was deepened by Tiger Skin Rug so that I was learning as well as being entertained as I read. The weaving in of conservation and environmental elements is so skilfully done that they enhance the narrative without being heavy handed or obvious, making children aware of what is happening without too much gory detail.

I found Lal such a brilliantly rounded character. His first person account brings the story to life so that I felt I’d really understood him and had grown to love him by the end of the book. His narrative voice is one that children and adults alike will identify with, particularly as he articulates his vulnerability and fears without seeming weak. It was also lovely to have an Indian protagonist in Lal, and a strong female in Jenny, so that friendship can be seen to cross gender and ethnicity.

Joan Haig’s themes in Tiger Skin Rug are perfect too. She explores loyalty and friendship, family and betrayal, and, most importantly, a sense of home, in such an emotive way I found myself shedding a small tear as I finished the book.

Tiger Skin Rug held me entranced. It’s an example of writing for children at its very best and I cannot recommend it highly enough. It’s brilliant.

About Joan Haig

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Joan Haig, born in Zambia, was weaned on avocados and stories. When she was twelve, her family moved to the happy isles of Vanuatu in the South West Pacific. She has lived and travelled all over the world, most recently settling with her husband, children and cats into a little cottage in the Scottish Borders.

Joan has researched and taught at the University of Warwick and University of Edinburgh; her teaching has won awards and her work on migration and belonging has been published in academic journals and edited volumes. She now works for Arcadia University’s Edinburgh Center.

Her writing dream is that her stories for children are enjoyed far and wide -and touch some grown-up hearts along the way.

You can find out more by following Joan on Twitter @joan_md_haig, finding her on Facebook and Instagram or by visiting her website.

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An Extract from The Year Without Summer by Guinevere Glasfurd

The Year Without Summer Cover

I’m utterly thrilled to be part of this Random Things Tour for The Year Without Summer by Guinevere Glasfurd and wish to thank Anne Cater for inviting me to participate. I have The Words Without Summer waiting to be read and having absolutely adored Guinevere’s novel The Words In My Hand, my review of which you can read here, I know I’m in for a treat.

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I was also lucky enough to interview Guinevere all about The Words In My Hand here on the blog and it was one of my books of the year in 2017. Since then, however, I’ve had the pleasure of meeting Guinevere Glasfurd in real life as I hosted her at The Deepings Literary Festival last May where she held us spellbound talking about her research.

With an extract to share with you from The Year Without Summer you’ll get an idea of what a beautiful writer Guinevere is.

The Year Without Summer is published today, 6th February 2020 by Two Roads and is available for purchase through the links here.

The Year Without Summer

The Year Without Summer Cover

1815: Sumbawa Island, Indonesia

Mount Tambora explodes in a cataclysmic eruption, killing thousands and causing famine, poverty and riots. Lives, both ordinary and privileged, are changed forever. Sent to investigate, ship surgeon Henry Hogg can barely believe his eyes. Once a paradise,the island is now solid ash, the surrounding sea turned to stone. But worse is yet to come: as the ash cloud rises and covers the sun, the seasons will fail.

1816:
In Switzerland, Mary Shelley finds dark inspiration. Confined inside by the unseasonable weather, thousands of famine refugees stream past her door. In Vermont, preacher Charles Whitlock begs his followers to keep faith as drought dries their wells andtheir livestock starve. In Britain, the ambitious and lovesick painter John Constable struggles to reconcile the idyllic England he paints with the misery that surrounds him. In the Fens, farm labourer Sarah Hobbs has had enough of going hungry while the farmers flaunt their wealth. And Hope Peter, returned from Napoleonic war, finds his family home demolished and a fence gone up in its place. He flees to London, where he falls in with a group of revolutionaries who speak of a better life, whatever the cost.
As desperation sets in, Britain becomes racked with riots – rebellion is in the air.

For fans of David Mitchell and Andrew Miller, The Year Without Summer tells the story of a fateful year when temperatures fell and the summer failed to arrive. It is a story of the books written, the art made; of the journeys taken, of the love longed for and the lives lost.

Six separate lives, connected only by an event many thousands of miles away. Few had heard of Tambora – but none could escape its effects.

An Extract from The Year Without Summer

Sarah

IF I’D KNOW’D it were wrong, I’d never have done it.

Weren’t anything much anyhow.

Mairster Benton had sent me away from his farm that morning  with nothing  and it was then that I catch’d up with Tessie and I guessed he’d sent her away too.

‘Mornin’,’ I said in greeting, as is only polite and she’s my elder by four years.

‘Mornin’,’ she said back, not looking at me, as if I were the slummocky one though she had the same lack of shoes on as me.

‘Where are you oft to?’ I asked, polite as I could, enquiring. Her striding on, head in the air, as though making for Norwich.

I asked her again and tugged on her sleeve to get her to say.

‘Never you mind, Sarah Hobbs,’ she said and shook my hand free.

Hobbs, was it? I didn’t know Tessie so well, but we’d worked the same fields last year, ’cluding Benton’s, and we were only two alleys apart when we were home so there weren’t need for talking to me as if I were up on high with the rectory folk.

‘Did he not have work for you then either?’

‘What’s that?’

‘Mairster Benton.’ Of course, Mairster Benton. Who else did she think I meant?

Her shoulders went up and down as though she’d been bumped over a tussock.

On we went like this, me asking and her not saying, though me knowing she was in the same such difficulty as me. I’d walked three miles already from Littleport to Benton’s  farm and now  here we was, halfway through walking those three miles back again. I hadn’t done it for the good of it and neither I knew had she.

‘Are  you going home?’ I asked. The path we were on could take us on further, if we decided we wanted to.

She shrugged again. All that shrugging. She’d only herself to blame if her arms shook off.

‘Because I was thinkin’ of going on to Cook’s farm. To see what’s likely there.’ Well, I had her attention  then, I could tell. By this point, we’d reached the edge of Willow Row and were walking along a ditch. I noticed the spar­ rergras they’d planted alongside were shrunk up as if shy of the light, as if it’d changed its mind and had turned its way back to the earth again. The thought of no sparrergras was a miserable thing. It weren’t the only miserable sight. A mizzlin rain had started, cold as frost.

Tessie’s eyes redded up and not just from the cold and I saw she was crying.

‘Tessie?’  I said and this time when I touched  her she stopped with her long striding ahead. Her name, me saying it, brought  from her such a shudder. She was crying the way you cry when there’s not anyone for miles to see. ‘Tessie, Tessie,’ I said and I rubbed her back. I hadn’t expected this.

‘How can I marry now?’ she said.

There weren’t no place to sit but she sat down anyway and I sat down beside her. I’d have pulled at the cotton grass but there were no grass to pull, nor anything much else come  up  green. Spring had passed us by without resting. I felt the rain, prickling, on its way to snow. No wonder the sparrergras wanted none of it. Still, Tessie and me both had our bonnets on so at least our heads could keep warm, after a fashion.

Tessie cried for some time. It were best to let her be and maybe she would tell me what were wrong but maybe she wouldn’t.

‘He’s a bastid,’ she said at last. ‘If I were a man, I’d take up a gun an’ I’d shoot him, I would.’

‘Who?’

‘Mairster Benton, that’s who.’

It was shocking to hear it, so strongly said, though I knew no one around had a good word for him.

‘You’d not!’ I imagined her with a gun, taking aim.

‘I would!’ and I saw then that she meant it.

‘They’d hang you, Tessie. By your neck.’

‘Don’t care.’

You would, I thought, but I kept that to meself. ‘What’s he done? He turned you away too?’

She nodded and dipped her head down. I knew she was trying not to cry again even though  her bonnet  had her hid.

‘I  don’t  know what I’ll  do . . .’  She wrung her hands, despairing.

‘He  didn’t  want me either.’  Small consolation  to her, adding my own misery to hers, no help at all, in fact. So I put on my Mairster Benton voice: ‘Employ a girl like you when I have my fill of good men?’  Sounded funny how I said it. Hadn’t been funny when he had.

‘Bastid,’ she said again and this time I agreed.

We sat for a while in the prinkling drizzle. I tucked my feet into my skirts to keep the worst of the cold off.

‘He hadn’t work for Thomas either.’ Thomas was her sweetheart, I knew. ‘Says he now has a plough this wide.’ She stretched her arms open as far as she could. ‘Would plough a field as wide as from here to Littleport. No need of Thomas with a plough like that. He said if I wanted to pick up stones he’d pay me half what he did before, elsewise he could get a man who’d do the same for what he paid me last year, only a man would pick up twice as much. He had a choice of fine men, good strong soldiering men more deserving of work than me, he said.’

‘Why’d he not take Thomas on then?’

She looked at me as if I were slower than a snail on dry sand. ‘Thomas told him straight he’d not pick up stones for a girl’s wages. That it weren’t right to put a man to such work.’

Well, yes. If I were a man, I’d be thinking it weren’t fair either. I never liked picking up stones anyway.

‘Benton told him beggars could not be choosers. And Thomas called him a bad ’un and damned him and his new plough and that’s when Benton told him to be gone and never come back.’

‘Bastid!’ I clapp’d my hand over my mouth.

Tessie pushed me on the shoulder and though she were not happy, she gave a small smile.

*     *     *

Now that we were on swearing terms together, we carried on our way in better cheer having decided we’d go on to Park Farm after all and ask after work there.

It was a fair traipse to the farm in the rain. We passed two men dragging a contraption  by hand. So beggardly muddy they were, they’d not even the breath to call after us.

Irish,’ she whispered and we hurried on by.

I couldn’t say it, but perhaps the thought was too noisy, chattering away to itself there in my head because then Tessie said, ‘I don’t have no hope we’ll be welcome at Cook’s farm.’

It was proper  blowy when we reached the farm’s fence, there being nothing  on the Fen to keep the wind from blowing how or where it wanted. I was relieved of it raining; there’d be a choke of dust otherwise. Through the gate, the track went on out to a farm at the end. Simple enough to walk down there to the door in a straight line like that. There were straight lines everywhere now since the Bedford Level lot had put in their ditches. Not all the land was fenced off like here at Cook’s farm, with a farmhouse  plonked down in the middle of it, but that didn’t give us the say­so to walk over it. Tessie and I stood there, our feet mired in mud and it had me thinking about the differences between straight and simple.

A notice had been fixed either side of the gate.

Capture

‘What’s they say?’

Tessie shrugged. ‘Summat else they got to shout about, I suppose. Never could read.’

She gave a look same as to say come on then and reached for my hand.

We’d gone no more than halfway down the track when I stopped and pulled out what I’d had in my pocket all the while. Tessie’s eyes opened up wide when she saw it.

A penknife. Handsome carved, with initials too. I turned it over in my hand and pulled out the blade.

‘That’s never yours . . .’

‘It’s Mairster Benton’s.’ Pride swelled my voice; I’d fluffed out fatter than a dandelion clock.

She looked at me full agog. ‘How did you come by it?

Did you steal it?

I pretended not to hear. One puff of wind would have shivered me all away. Truth was, he’d dropp’d it without noticing and I’d covered it with my foot and whipped it up quick when he looked the other way.

‘Finders keepers,’ I said and skipped ahead. Weren’t much use other than for whittling that I could see, but he weren’t having it back.

And that about served him right.

About Guinevere Glasfurd

Guinever Glasfurd Author Pic

Guinevere Glasfurd was born in Lancaster and lives near Cambridge with her husband and daughter. Her debut novel, The Words in My Hand, was shortlisted for the 2016 Costa First Novel Award and Authors’ Club Best First Novel Award and was
longlisted in France for the Prix du Roman FNAC. Her writing has also appeared in the Scotsman, Mslexia and The National Galleries of Scotland.

You can found out more about Guinevere on her website, or follow Guinevere on Twitter @GuinGlasfurd. There’s more with these other bloggers too:

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