The Seven Imperfect Rules of Elvira Carr by Frances Maynard

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When The Seven Imperfect Rules of Elvira Carr by Frances Maynard was first published I was lucky enough to host an extract that you can read here. I had intended to read and review the book soon after but somehow my copy vanished somewhere in my 900+ TBR. (I think Elvira may have eloped with Harold Fry as I can’t find him either!)

However, lovely Ellis Keene sent me another copy of the paperback as I shall be lucky enough to stay in with Frances Maynard here on Linda’s Book Bag on 12th July when I do hope you’ll come back and join us. Consequently, seven months later than planned I finally have my review of The Seven Imperfect Rules of Elvira Carr!

Published by Pan Macmillan, The Seven Imperfect Rules of Elvira Carr is available for purchase through the publisher links here.

The Seven Imperfect Rules of Elvira Carr

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Funny, heart-warming and ultimately triumphant, The Seven Imperfect Rules of Elvira Carr is the perfect story for anyone who doesn’t quite fit in – and for everyone who chooses not to.

Elvira Carr is twenty-seven and neuro-atypical. Her father – who she suspects was in the secret service – has passed away and, after several Unfortunate Incidents growing up, she now spends most of her time at home with her overbearing mother. But when her mother has a stroke and is taken into care, Elvira is suddenly forced to look after herself or risk ending up in Sheltered Accommodation. Armed with her Seven Rules, which she puts together after online research, Elvira hopes to learn how to navigate a world that’s full of people she doesn’t understand. Not even the Seven Rules can help her, however, when she discovers that everything she thought she knew about her father was a lie, and is faced with solving a mystery she didn’t even know existed . . .

My Review of The Seven Imperfect Rules of Elvira Carr

Elvira is used to her overbearing mother dealing with everything from what Elvira wears to where she goes and what she eats, but life is about to change.

The Seven Imperfect Rules of Elvira Carr is a refreshing insight into the life and mind of Elvira – a young woman whom society would at best describe as ‘different’. And it is this difference that makes for such a satisfying read because Elvira’s fears, her insecurities, her need to be loved for her own sake, alongside her realisation that not everyone can be taken at face value is absolutely no different from the needs and understanding of all humanity. Elvira actually embodies the emotions all of us have at some point and I loved her for it.

There is sadness and pathos in the book as Elvira navigates her way through life, but so much more about her is uplifting and enlightening. Who couldn’t love someone who knows absolutely everything about biscuits and their packaging? The Seven Imperfect Rules of Elvira Carr made me smile and laugh, especially when Elvira began to develop her rules to help her cope in society. I have a feeling if we all took them on board the world would be a better place. I can’t say too much about the rules and what happens as a result of them as this would spoil the story, but they make the structure of the book so satisfying to read.

All the characters are extremely well depicted. I really want to meet Mark as I have something I would like to say (and possibly do) to him! I want to know what is happening to Elvira and Sylvia et al now I’ve finished the book as they feel so real that I care about what happens next to them. I’ve even found myself wondering what Elvira would say in certain situations as if she’s a friend I haven’t seen for a while. Frances Maynard has made me care about the people in her story and given them such vivacious and dynamic personas that I am missing them in my life. Whilst Elvira’s mother is quickly ‘off-stage’ in the story as she moves to her care home, she still remains pivotal to how Elvira thinks and behaves and this is so cleverly written. This even more the case for Elvira’s father who has died well before the story begins but is actually the catalyst for so much of the action.

Indeed, The Seven Imperfect Rules of Elvira Carr has wonderful plotting. Certainly it is an account of Elvira’s coming of age but there is mystery too so that the reader, whilst being several steps ahead of Elvira through the hints dropped, experiences her new perspective on life with her and I found that very effective and engaging indeed.

The Seven Imperfect Rules of Elvira Carr is an absolutely smashing read. It made me happy to have encountered Elvira. She has brightened my life, entertained me and given me a whole new perspective on the way we interact in society and that is quite a triumph. I really recommend it because it will warm your heart and lighten your soul. Wonderful!

About Frances Maynard

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Frances teaches English part-time to adults with learning difficulties, including Asperger’s. She is married with one grown-up daughter and lives in Dorset.

You can follow Frances on Twitter @perkinsfran1 and visit her website.

Staying in with C. T. Sullivan

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Having lived and worked in New York for a while I love it when I find new to me authors who either live in The Big Apple too or who have set their books there. Consequently, it gives me great pleasure to welcome C.T. Sullivan to Linda’s Book Bag today to tell me about one of his books.

Staying in with C.T. Sullivan

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

Not only is it a pleasure, Linda, but it’s raining outside.

Not in the UK it isn’t! It’s been unusually hot and dry here. You can’t have good weather all the time. We’ll just have to chat about books. Tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening and why have you chosen it? 

C T Sullivan 12-10-2017

I’ve brought Apple Insider – An Englishman in New York. Pegasus gave birth to it three months ago and I think it’s ready to venture out on its own.

(Now this does pique my interest having been an Englishwoman in New York!)

What can we expect from an evening in with Apple Insider?

A journey full of fun and discovery. When my wife, Deborah, was seconded to her New York office for three months, I was part of the package. There, purely as ballast, I decided to keep an account of my experiences and observations whilst foraging around in the bizarre, fascinating and naughty bits of Manhattan’s historical underbelly. Apple Insider is an informative and humorous account of my three- month stay in the city that appears to ignore the practice of sleep. The book has been described as ‘a sort of Bill Bryson in reverse.’ Well, if it is only half as good as that then the wonderful Mr Bryson will be twice as good as me. I’ll take that!

(I bet you will. I love the sound of Apple Insider.)

Grahame Pearson, magazine editor, wrote:

Brooklyn Bridge, Central Park, Carnegie Hall, yellow cabs, the Empire State Building – Sullivan has anecdotes to tell about them all. He has a gift of regaling the reader with facts but in a way which will leave you breathless with laughter. I loved it.

Susan Davis, prize-winning author and literary critic, wrote:

C T Sullivan captures the spirit of NYC with all its many quirks and contradictions with wit and style. Apple Insider is a funny book, liberally peppered with comic gems and set-pieces. The setting is powerfully evoked, becoming almost a living presence ensuring the reader will feel they have made the trip with the author. Some stunning imagery and very fine writing make this a thoroughly entertaining read. 

(You must be delighted with those comments Chris. I will have to travel back to New York as soon as I can through Apple Insider.)

What else have you brought along and why? 

Woof

I’ve brought along, as my guest, my golden Labrador Woof. This is because he loves Apples, he is English and he’s never been to New York.

(Isn’t he just adorable? This is usually a cat oriented house – I almost said cathouse but that would have different connotations with the American connection – but Woof is very welcome.)

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Also a picture of Central Park, which is not just a miracle of engineering slipped into the middle of a concrete jungle, but an oasis of calm. Without this mollifying, predominately green escape I would, most likely, have had to write this book with crayons from a secure facility.

(I agree. What a place to go.)

Thanks so much for staying in with me and chatting all about Apple Insider Chris. It has made me want to head back to New York and to read the book as soon as I can.

Apple Insider

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When Chris accompanies his wife Deborah on her secondment to her New York office, it heralds ninety-one days of joy, frustrations and craziness.

As he uncovers this amazing city’s history of surprises and seedy secrets, join him in his many adventures, from dicing with death in an elevator, entertaining a wacky wedding party and having a set-to with a mad traffic cop, to Deborah being arrested by airport security in Toronto.

Apple Insider –  An Englishman in New York is available for purchase through the publisher links here.

About C T Sullivan

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Christopher Sullivan was born in London’s East End amid tough, sharp-witted cockney characters, but was brought up in a Wimbledon council flat from an early age. After a grammar school education he had a long and successful career as a city money-broker. On leaving the city, whilst learning his craft as an author, he worked as a lorry driver, landscape gardener, film extra, and sung and played guitar in pubs and wine-bars.  He is a singer-songwriter, performs stand-up musical comedy and has written short stories and poems from the age of ten. Loves: music, sport, Woof and wife (not necessarily in that order). His first novel, crime thriller Reasonable Force, was published by Pegasus in 2015.

You can follow Chris on Twitter @Sullyonair, find him on Facebook and visit his website for more details.

Buttercup Sunshine and the Zombies of Dooooom by Colin Mulhern

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My grateful thanks to Val Hall at Maverick Children’s Books for a copy of Buttercup Sunshine and the Zombies of Dooooom by Colin Mulhern in return for an honest review.

Buttercup Sunshine and the Zombies of Dooooom will be published on 28th September 2018 and is available for pre-order here.

Buttercup Sunshine and the Zombies of Dooooom

Buttercup

Briar’s Cove is the nicest, safest, sweetest place there ever was, where nothing
bad ever happens… Until a fallen star causes the dead to rise from their graves.

Buttercup Sunshine is the friendliest, most angelic little girl you could ever imagine. That is, until an entire army of undead rise from the grave and she’s the only one who can stop them.

Together with her beloved Granny, and armed only with a vacuum cleaner and a
bag of wool, Buttercup Sunshine must make a stand against the approaching
army of the undead.

How can Buttercup and Granny knit their way out this one?

My review of Buttercup Sunshine and the Zombies of Dooooom

When the undead rise from their graves, Buttercup Sunshine has a fight on her hands.

Marketed for 7-9 year olds, I think Buttercup Sunshine and the Zombies of Dooooom may unnerve more timid children at the younger end of the age range so I think parents should read it first (and they’ll really enjoy it) to decide when to share it.

That said, I thought Buttercup Sunshine and the Zombies of Dooooom was a cracking children’s book. It’s really well plotted with an ending that leads nicely into any future adventures for Buttercup. The language is so accessible that children could read it to themselves and I think it would be a perfect story for older more reluctant readers too. I can see 10 and 11 year old reluctant readers thoroughly enjoying this book. The story is exciting, scary and frequently very funny, particularly when Mr Blackberry is being approached by a zombie – but you’ll have to read the book to find out why!

Buttercup is a triumph of characterisation. She retains enough childhood innocence as she plays at being an undercover agent with her partner Barry the toad, only to find herself at the centre of saving the inhabitants of Briar’s Cove. This makes her an excellent role model, illustrating that girls can have just as many and as exciting adventures as boys. I also loved the idea that it might just be possible to knit your way out of trouble.

The illustrations accompanying the text are a triumph. Children will love the staring eyes of the zombies and the reaching, grasping hands. My favourite image was Buttercup’s ‘warrior pose’.

I also liked the inclusion of questions with Colin Mulhern at the end of the story. They would be great discussion points for either home of classroom use. In fact, I think Buttercup Sunshine and the Zombies of Dooooom would be a brilliant class reader for primary schools. With horror and comedy, and science and nature included, there’s so much to be explored beyond the initial narrative.

It is obvious that the author, Colin Mulhern, knows children well and understands exactly what they enjoy – jokes and being just a little bit scared. When I researched him I was so moved to find Buttercup Sunshine and the Zombies of Dooooom was dedicated to his son Matthew who sadly passed away in 2015 and I think Matthew would have been proud and delighted that his Dad has created such a wonderful book for children.

Buttercup Sunshine and the Zombies of Dooooom is a corker of a children’s book and I thoroughly recommend it. 

About Colin Mulhern

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Working at a primary school in Sunderland, Colin is right at the front of the educational coalface.

He is a natural, modern-style of writer who understands the distractions children often face when it comes to reading. Pitched at 7-9 year olds, Colin describes this series as Goldilocks meets Night of the Living Dead. Its full-on, fast-paced silliness will have kids laughing out loud and looking for more!

You can follow Colin on Twitter @colinmulhern, visit his website and find him on Facebook.

Staying in with Renee Rocco

Infertility Sucks

Never having had (or had the desire to have) children of our own, but understanding the need other couples feel, I was intrigued when Renee Rocco got in touch recently so I decided to invite her onto Linda’s Book Bag to tell me all about her book.

Staying in with Renee Rocco

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

Thank you for having me! What a fun way to welcome authors to your site.

I’m glad you like the concept! Tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening and why have you chosen it? 

Infertility Sucks

Currently, this is my only published book. A lifetime ago I was an author of paranormal romance, but my path changed. I now work behind the scenes for a NY publisher but decided to dip my toe back in the writing waters. One Saturday in December 2017, my daughters were outside playing in the snow together, and I thought about all the doctors who told me I’d never have children. Just like that, the words started to pour out of me, and before I knew it, Infertility Sucks was born.

(I love the fact you can pinpoint the very moment your book began.)

During my decade-long battle with infertility, I was also in constant pain due to a host of reproductive issues. Namely, endometriosis and a diseased fallopian tube. I suffered in silence for so long, and know there were so many other women just like me, who felt broken and who learned to live in agony. I hope that, with each voice lent to the fight, infertility – and women’s reproductive issues as a whole – will stop being a dirty secret.

(I think there are many, many women who will identify with that sentiment Renee.)

What can we expect from an evening in with Infertility Sucks?

Well, I get pretty raw about the embarrassing details of gynecological exams and childbirth!

(Eek!)

I tried to balance the serious with a dash of humor. I tend to be a bit sarcastic, and I think that came through in my writing. Someone told me that while reading Infertility Sucks, she felt as if we were having coffee together. Just two people having a conversation. That was my hope as I wrote it. That folks come away feeling as if they’ve spent some time with an old friend.

(I think that sounds a brilliant way to tackle a difficult subject.)

I also address my battle with the depression that followed the birth of my first daughter – who we had via IVF. I didn’t have an easy life, and five months after my daughter was born, I lost my brother. Although I had already begun to sink into depression, his death was the catalyst that sent me into a downward spiral. But, I fought way back, and I talk about that, too. Gosh, I know it sounds so dark and dreary, but I wrote the story with a light, and sometimes humorous, hand.

(Don’t apologise. We all have dark times in our lives and the fact you’re here telling me about Infertility Sucks shows we can recover and have positive times too.)

What else have you brought along and why?

Frankie + Renee

I’ve brought along my husband, Frankie. Without him, my story would have ended the night I was told I’d never have kids. We met when we were twenty-seven. I’d moved on his block, and was in an awful place mentally. We became instant best friends. He taught me how to live again, and reminded me that I had courage and strength buried beneath layers of pain. Together, we built a solid foundation, and eighteen years later, we’re still the very best of friends. He once told me he couldn’t give me the world, but promised to make me laugh every day. He’s lived up to that promise. Of course, our humor tends to lean a bit toward the sarcasm, but that’s okay. I’m like Benjamin Button. I was born old and am aging in reverse. The older I get, the more carefree and silly I become. I’ve learned there’s nothing more valuable than laughter.

(How wonderful. I like the sound of Frankie very much! Here’s to the next eighteen years of getting younger together!)

Thank you so much for staying in and telling me all about Infertility Sucks Renee. I think it sounds a book to help many women through their own dark times.

Thank you so much for having me, Linda! It was a pleasure to spend some time with you.

Infertility Sucks

Infertility Sucks

At twenty-one, I was diagnosed with infertility.
It took a decade to prove the doctors wrong.

At nineteen I suffered my first ovarian cyst. Two years later a doctor declared I’d never have children. After a decade of being dismissed as a hypochondriac, I was diagnosed with endometriosis, chronic ovarian cysts, a diseased Fallopian tube, and uterine polyps. My reproductive organs were a mess, and the constant pain was unbearable.

Too stubborn to give up, I became a woman on a mission.

Three surgeries and two cycles of in vitro fertilization later, we had our first daughter. A quickie while she was at school gave us our second.

Infertility Sucks is an honest peek into how I dealt with infertility, IVF, and the depression that followed.

Infertility Sucks is available for purchase here.

About Renee Rocco

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Once upon a time, Renee was an author of paranormal romance. Now she works behind the scenes for a New York publisher. Three years into parenthood, she saved her sanity when she embraced being a hot mess. Renee and her husband are more Morticia and Gomez than Rebecca and Jack. Renee says ‘My kids don’t eat organic, nor are they in dance, cheer, or sports. But we’re healthy and happy, and that’s what counts. I’m just your average suburban misfit doing my best not to raise a**holes.’

You can find out more by visiting Renee’s website and finding her on Facebook, Twitter @reneerocco, Instagram and Pinterest.

The Woolgrower’s Companion by Joy Rhoades

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Having been heart-broken by reading The Woolgrower’s Companion by Joy Rhoades, I’m absolutely thrilled to be part of the book’s launch celebrations and would like to thank Sian Divine for inviting me to participate and for sending me a copy of The Woolgrower’s Companion in return for an honest review. Even better for me is the fact that Joy is staying in with me to chat about the book today.

Staying in with Joy Rhoades

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag Joy. It’s such a treat to have you here. Thank you for agreeing to stay in with me.

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

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I’ve brought along my debut novel The Woolgrower’s Companion, to celebrate its release in paperback from Viking Books, Penguin in the UK on 28/6.

(Huge congratulations Joy!)

What can we expect from an evening in with The Woolgrower’s Companion?

An evening in with The Woolgrower’s Companion is a bit hard to categorize. A lot of different groups claimed it in Australia, where, I’m thrilled to say, it was one of the best-selling debuts of 2017. It’s historical fiction, literary fiction and it also appealed to what booksellers call the mass market. And book clubs and libraries liked it too.

(I’m not surprised. I loved, loved, loved The Woolgrower’s Companion and will be sharing my review in a moment or two!)

I’m proudest of the wonderful writer Elizabeth Buchan, who said, ‘a novel about endurance and a stubborn will to survive, it is written with passion and intensity that is hugely attractive.”

(And she’s absolutely right!)

What else have you brought along and why?

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I’ve also brought some of Mavis’s sponge cake! In The Woolgrower’s Companionmany of the themes emerge through the homestead kitchen, the people coming and going, and food prepared and eaten there. So for example, Daisy, the Aboriginal Australian girl, secretly prepares food. It’s 1945 and she (and Kate, her boss) can’t let visitors know that an Aboriginal Australian has touched the food. Kate rejects that and subverts the rule. Kate eats here too, with her father, and later with another character, who I won’t name here, as he’s central to the story.

The recipe for Mavis’s sponge cake is in the back of the book, along with a number of family recipes. Mavis was a wonderfully kind bush woman, the mother of a family of girls, all friends of our family of girls. And Mavis was-the-best-cook. This is her remarkable sponge.

I love the recipes in the back of the book Joy. Thanks so much for staying in with me to chat all about your wonderful The Woolgrower’s Companion. I’ll put the kettle on, make a pot of tea, turn it three times, and we’ll have a slice of cake whilst you read my review of your book!

My Review of The Woolgrower’s Companion

With WW2 raging abroad, life is tough for those eking out a living on Australian homesteads.

Oh heavens. If anyone were to ask me for an example of a perfect read, The Woolgrower’s Companion would be it. I truly adored it. Joy Rhoades seems to have looked inside my heart, found what touches it completely and used every element in her writing so that I am emotionally bereft at having finished the book. I read the last page, burst into tears and took quite a while to stop sobbing! The Woolgrower’s Companion broke me completely and I loved it as a result.

The plotting is flawless. This may be billed as a love story, which it is – and an absolutely wonderful one at that, but it is so much more besides. Alongside love there is family, authority, feminism, mystery, violence, grief and pure unadulterated joy. There’s prejudice, history and geography too so that reading The Woolgrower’s Companion is like being conveyed straight to the 1940s and experiencing every nuance of life at the time. Sometimes Joy Rhoades shocks her reader, sometimes she thrills them, but always she entertains, captivates and enthralls them. All life is experienced between these pages. The attention to detail in the descriptions of nature surrounding Amiens sheep station gives a cinematic piquancy that is astounding.

Part of the complete entrancement of this book is that it is impossible not to be involved with the characters. I worried about them all the time, especially Kate and Daisy, when I wasn’t actually reading about them. I thought Harry was a magnificent creation. He provides such an effective light relief as well as some of the most poignant aspects and his speech is so natural that I could hear him as if he were by my side. Daisy too has such presence and I was outraged at the prejudice against the Aboriginal people of the time.

It illustrates the fabulous quality of Joy Rhoades’ writing that the ‘quotations’ at the start of each chapter reflect perfectly what is happening without once undermining her glorious storytelling. The inclusion of recipes at the end of the book also helps convince the reader that this isn’t a work of fiction, but an account of real people’s lives – people whom we care about.

The Woolgrower’s Companion is a sublime book. It thrums with emotion and drama and held me completely spell-bound. I didn’t want it to end and feel adrift without it. It is amazing and I want everyone to have the joy (and pain) of reading it.

The Woolgrower’s Companion

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Australia 1945. Until now Kate Dowd has led a sheltered life on her family’s sprawling sheep station but, with her father’s health in decline, the management of the farm is increasingly falling to her.

Kate is rising to the challenge when the arrival of two Italian POW labourers disrupts everything – especially when Kate finds herself drawn to the enigmatic Luca Canali.

Then she receives devastating news. The farm is near bankrupt and the bank is set to repossess. Given just eight weeks to pay the debt, Kate is now in a race to save everything she holds dear.

The Woolgrower’s Companion is available for purchase through these links.

About Joy Rhoades

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Joy Rhoades was born in a small town in the bush in Queensland, Australia, with an early memory of flat country and a broad sky. Growing up, she loved two things best: reading and the bush, often climbing a tree to sit with a book. Her family would visit her grandmother, a fifth-generation grazier and a gentle teller of stories of her life on her family’s sheep farm.

At 13, Joy left for Brisbane, first for school and then to study law at university. After graduating, she worked all over the world as a lawyer. It was in New York that she completed a master’s degree in Creative Writing at the New School University, and the people, the history, and the landscape of her childhood led her to start writing The Woolgrower’s Companion.

She now lives in London with her French husband and their two young children, but she misses the Australian sky.

You can follow Joy on Twitter @JoyRhoades1, find her on Facebook and visit her website.

There’s more with these other bloggers too:

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Discussing With or Without You with Shari Low

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I’m a great believer in fate – I think it’s how I met my husband – and we often chat about the ‘what if’ moments in life. Consequently it gives me great pleasure to be part of the launch celebrations for With or Without You and to stay in with author Shari Low to find out more about the book and some ‘what if’ moments of her own!

Staying in with Shari Low

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

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

9781788541411

I’ve brought With or Without You as it’s just been released.

What can we expect from an evening in with With or Without You?

Hopefully it’s one of those books about love, about choices and about friendship that will keep you gripped until the very last page. And as soon as it’s done, it might just inspire you call your best pal and speculate about some of the life changing decisions you’ve made along the way.

(How interesting. And funnily enough, as well as staying in with you I’m also having lunch with a friend of 47 years today so I think we might just chat all about those decisions.)

What else have you brought along and why?

The guests would of course include my gang of girlfriends, as I rarely leave home without them! My husband frequently comments that he didn’t realise when he married me that I came with several women sitting around the kitchen table at all times.

(They are very welcome – the more the merrier.)

caramel

There would be wine, tea and caramel wafers, because there are very few disasters that cannot be soothed with some combination of alcohol, caffeine and chocolate-covered snacks.

(I quite agree!)

The music playlist would feature brilliant holiday tunes and Motown hits, as one of the characters is fond of belting out a Diana Ross tune.

Shari Wedding

And I’d bring my husband, because a conversation with him inspired the story. Last summer, on a gorgeous night in Florida, we were reminiscing about a time 20 years ago when we briefly parted. We both had some great theories about what would have happened to our lives if we hadn’t reunited a few months later. And yes, I think Shari Bon Jovi has a lovely ring to it. In the end, we got back together, and I’ll always be glad that we did. However, the next morning I woke up and the storyline for With or Without You was fully formed in my imagination.

(Ooo. Now that IS interesting! Wonderful photo by the way.) 

Thanks so much for staying in with me Shari, to chat all about With or Without You. Let’s get the Motown playing and dive into those wafers…

With or Without You

9781788541411

Have you ever made a life-changing decision and then wondered if you made the right one…?

A clever, captivating and bittersweet story of what might have been. Perfect for the fans of Jo Jo Moyes and Marian Keyes.

When Liv and Nate walked up the aisle, Liv knew she was marrying the one, her soul mate and her best friend.

Six years later, it feels like routine and friendship is all they have left in common. What happened to the fun, the excitement, the lust, the love?

In the closing moments of 1999, Liv and Nate decide to go their separate ways, but at the last minute, Liv wavers. Should she stay or should she go?

Over the next twenty years we follow the parallel stories to discover if Liv’s life, heart and future have been better with Nate… Or without him?

With or Without You is available for purchase through these links:  AmazonKoboiBooks and Google Play. 

About Shari Low

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Shari Low has published twenty novels over the last two decades. She also writes for newspapers, magazines and television. Once upon a time, she got engaged to a guy she’d known for a week, and twenty-something years later, they live in Glasgow with their two teenage sons and a labradoodle.

You can follow Shari on Twitter @sharilow and find her on Facebook. Shari also has a website.

There’s more with these other bloggers too:With or Without You blog tour banner

Staying in with Michael Stephenson

the man on the roof cover

I’d like to thank Michael Stephenson for asking me to be part of the launch celebrations for The Man on the Roof. I’m very pleased to welcome Michael to Linda’s Book Bag today. Michael has kindly agreed to spend an evening with me chatting about this new release.

Staying in with Michael Stephenson

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

The pleasure is all mine, Linda. I should thank you for letting me stay in with you.

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

the man on the roof cover

Tonight I have chosen my new novel The Man On The Roof. It’s only the second full-fledged mystery thriller that I’ve written, but I’m quite proud to bring it to you. I chose to stay in with this book because I’m currently on a huge psychological-thriller binge. This novel shares the same shelf with Gone Girl, The Girl on the Train, The Woman in the Window and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Who doesn’t sometimes like a dark, twisty, up-all-night read that’ll make you chuckle once or twice and deeply think about important issues?

(Who indeed? I love a psychological thriller!)

What can we expect from an evening in with The Man On The Roof?

This is going to sound cliché, but expect the unexpected… as well as the totally expected. We think a lot of things in this world: that what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger, that love can conquer all, that most people are inherently good, that we’ve read it all when it comes to recent psychological thrillers, that we know our neighbors and that they’re decent people. But what if we’re wrong about all of it? What if we haven’t read every twist? What if our neighbors really aren’t that decent? What if…

(Oo-er – we’ve just got new neighbours – the ones just across the road. What if…)

Most of all, I think The Man On The Roof is one of few mystery novels that is even better when re-read, even after the mystery is solved.

(That’s very interesting. I sometimes like to reread a book when I know the outcome to see if I can spot the clues along the way better the second time around.)

What else have you brought along and why?

spare ribs

I’ve brought an eclectic mix of food and music. I bought some of the best smoked BBQ ribs—last of the summer season. Their hickory taste and buttery pork are melting in my mouth.

cake

Next, I brought a lemon-lime wedding cake because who doesn’t like cake? And a lemon-lime wedding cake with a puckering taste? Mmm… Love is such sweet sour.

cheese

Finally, I brought a platter of cheese, croissants and wine, because I don’t know a single person who doesn’t.

That sounds like my kind of food Michael. Thanks so much for staying in with me to tell me all about The Man on the Roof. I’ve enjoyed our evening.

The Man on the Roof

the man on the roof cover

Someone has been creeping in the dark while the others sleep, and they’ve done terrible, terrible things.

“There was a man on your roof,” claims curmudgeonly lane-hermit Herbert McKinney. Then, he initiates an unprovoked fight with a local punk. Drama escalates when that punk’s dead body is found hanging at mid-street one August morning—a boastful killer messaging their next prey. All fingers point to Herbert as the culprit. Soon, the five couples he calls neighbors come under suspicion, too. When lead detective Cady Lambert divines blackmail as the motive, eyes cross to find who hides the most shameful secret. Husband versus wife, friend versus friend, the shiny suburban veneer of innocence has been forever tarnished. As hidden deviousness boils from their pores, there lurks a thief, a pill addict and a sadist—secrets worth killing for.

Now, as the man on the roof helps guide justice and watches devious neighbors slip in and out of sleepy houses, confusion and questions persist. Who dies next? What have they learned? Who is becoming a monster? Who already is one? And just how many secrets can a small group of multi-ethnic Ohioans have? Only one cemented truth exists: the killer will kill again.

A tension-building psychological mystery-suspense thriller, The Man On The Roof propels the reader through a tangled, volatile and suspenseful thicket of deception, murder and friends, inviting the reader to discover the murderer and who hides which lie.

The Man on the Roof is available for purchase here.

About Michael Stephenson

An American-born, American-raised author, Michael enjoys writing in every genre and for every medium. Covering a wide range of subjects, ethnicities, socio-economic classes, and ideals, his writing runs the gambit from silly and light-hearted to thought-provoking and sensual to horrifying and captivating. Offering everything from sci-fi to romance, he wishes to supply the reader with an indelible experience.

Having grown up in the Midwest of the United States, he has travelled and lived in towns throughout the USA and enjoys learning of other cultures whenever he can. A lover of story, he believes a great story makes for great writing. He believes that great writers aren’t necessarily made by their words, but by the words their readers write about them.

Privately, he seeks to accomplish great things with his writing in both popular culture as well as more niche genres. He hopes to one day again write for film, and aspires to write the screenplay for the film adaptation of Captain Planet.

You can follow Michael on Twitter @filmbooksbball and there’s more with these other bloggers.

tour poster

I Found My Tribe by Ruth Fitzmaurice

I found my tribe

My enormous thanks to Emma Finnigan for a surprise copy of I Found My Tribe by Ruth Fitzmaurice that arrived unexpectedly.

I Found My Tribe is published by Vintage and is available for purchase through the links here.

I Found My Tribe

I found my tribe

Ruth’s tribe are her lively children and her filmmaker husband, Simon, who has Motor Neurone Disease and can only communicate with his eyes. Ruth’s other ‘tribe’ are the friends who gather at the cove in Greystones, Co. Wicklow, and regularly throw themselves into the freezing cold water, just for kicks.

‘The Tragic Wives’ Swimming Club’, as they jokingly call themselves, meet to cope with the extreme challenges life puts in their way, not to mention the monster waves rolling over the horizon.

An invocation to all of us to love as hard as we can, and live even harder, I Found My Tribe is an urgent and uplifting letter to a husband, family, friends, the natural world and the brightness of life.

My Review of I Found My Tribe

With her husband Simon dying from Motor Neurone Disease, Ruth has to find a way of coping – through her tribe.

I Found My Tribe is an intense, emotional and beautiful memoir that resonates with every single one of us who has experienced any kind of grief. Ruth Fitzmaurice has the astounding ability to convey through her writing what the rest of us can only feel but never articulate effectively.  I ended the book with eyes and nose streaming and my chest heaving with sobs as the effect of reading I Found My Tribe was to release so many pent up feelings of grief I have been suppressing over the last couple of years. It was both cathartic and healing and I am incredibly grateful for the experience.

However, I Found My Tribe has so much to offer those who haven’t experienced the same losses in their lives. Firstly, the quality of Ruth Fitzmaurice’s writing is wonderful. At times it is intensely sad, at others funny but always incredibly human and frequently beautifully poetic so that I could place myself alongside the author and experience her life with her. The variety of sentence structure, the use of repetition, the expletives, the first person approach, the rhetorical questions – all the wonderful literary devices Ruth Fitzmaurice employs without them ever feeling contrived – all add up a truly magnificent book.

The passages dedicated to the sea and Ruth’s wild-swimming are fabulous. I felt all manner of emotions from anxiety that The Tragic Wives Swimming Club might be injured, to jealousy that I wasn’t participating with them, to relief and vicarious exultation at the end of each swim. The descriptions of the beach and sea made me want to head straight to the coast. The way I Found My Tribe is structured is very much like the way the sea behaves. Sometimes the writing is calm and reflective, at others it crashes across the page with anger and rage. Each short chapter felt like the tide coming and going to me.

Although there are no ‘characters’ per se because this is a memoir and these are real people, I felt each person was so well depicted that I knew them intimately. Reading I Found My Tribe has given me the utmost respect for Ruth Fitzmaurice. How she managed to cope with five children, various animals and a totally incapacitated husband is beyond comprehension. She is a warrior in her own right and I feel privileged to have read about her and Simon.

I know I haven’t done justice to I Found My Tribe. I read it in one sitting because I simply could not tear myself away. It is a soul-stirring, heart-breaking and poignant book and I defy anyone not to be moved by it.

About Ruth Fitzmaurice

ruth

Ruth Fitzmaurice was a radio researcher and producer when she married her husband, Simon, in 2004 and had three children.

In 2008, Simon was diagnosed with ALS and given three years to live. Simon went into respiratory failure in 2010 and was accidentally placed on a ventilator during an emergency procedure.

He decided against medical advice to keep the ventilator; Ruth and Simon went on to have twins in 2012. She lives in Greystones, Ireland, with her five children, two dogs and two cats.

Staying in with Julie Shackman

Room at the Manor FC - 27 April 2018

I am so lucky to get the chance to ‘meet’ authors and their books as a result of being a blogger and today I’m delighted to welcome Julie Shackman to Linda’s Book Bag. Julie has kindly agreed to stay in with me to tell me about one of her books.

Staying in with Julie Shackman

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

Thank you for granting me an appearance on your blog, Linda. It’s a real honour!

Which of your books have you brought along this evening and why have you chosen this one?

Room at the Manor FC - 27 April 2018

I’ve brought along my latest novel, A Room at the Manor. It’s a tale of tea shops; baking; family and romance. I’ve chosen it because it is my latest book and it’s being released tomorrow!

(Oh – how exciting! Happy publication day for tomorrow. What an absolutely gorgeous cover for A Room at the Manor too!)

What can we expect from an evening in with A Room at the Manor?

I hope that A Room at the Manor gives the readers lots of laughter, tears and escapism.

It’s about what a person can achieve when someone shows in faith in them and what determination and passion can result in.

I hope that A Room at the Manor has characters who the readers can relate to; love and empathise with and that they enjoy Lara’s story and how and why she discovers what she wants from life.

(A Room at the Manor sounds EXACTLY my kind of read. I’m going to have to find room on the TBR for it somehow!)

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

chamomile tea

Well, I used to drink coffee up until about four years ago and then a friend of mine, Amanda, got me interested in herbal tea and now I am well and truly hooked!

So, I can offer you some English breakfast tea, as well as peppermint and camomile, Linda.

(English breakfast for me please Julie. Good and strong too.)

Coconut cake

I also brought some cake. I love most things but I am rather partial to a fresh, warm, plain scone with butter or anything that is drizzled in coconut. Hope we can share some!

Scones

(I’m not keen on dessicated coconut but I love a scone so I’m glad to see you brought plenty. I’ve got a very nice black cherry jam that will go well with them.)

Chip

In keeping with the tea shop and baking themes, I’ve also brought along Chip, the enchanted tea up from Beauty and The Beast.

I love all things Disney but this has been my favourite fairy tale of them all, ever since I was little.

I’m an avid reader as well as a writer and for me, being able to lose yourself in an imaginary world, with characters who you admire, is wonderful.

Since I was little, I’ve adored the spell binding qualities of Beauty and The Beast and it still has a timeless air about it today.

(I just watched this recently Julie and I fell in love with it too!)

Thanks so much for staying in with me Julie, and telling me about A Room at the Manor. I think it sounds my kind of read and again – happy publication day for tomorrow.

A Room at the Manor

Room at the Manor FC - 27 April 2018

When her Maltese love affair turns sour, Lara McDonald returns to her quiet Scottish hometown of Fairview heartbroken, yet determined – instead of looking for another PR position, she decides to follow her dream of baking. She impulsively takes the first job offered and finds herself working for local dragon Kitty Walker in her tea room, True Brew.

Lara’s life is full of surprises, however, not the least being an unlikely friendship forged with one of Kitty’s elderly customers, the former laird Hugo Carmichael. The Carmichael family has lived at the beautiful Glenlovatt Manor for almost three hundred years and, although in need of renovation, Hugo, his son and grandson currently make it their home. There’s something about Lara that Hugo likes, and when Hugo suddenly passes away, Lara is stunned to discover she is mentioned in his will. But not everyone is happy with the old Laird’s faith in Lara.

A story of love, family, hope and trust, A Room at the Manor will delight every reader keen to find their place in the world.

Published by Allen & Unwin, A Room at the Manor is available for purchase here.

In Australia and New Zealand, you can buy it on line and also from all good bookshops.

About Julie Shackman

Julie

Julie Shackman lives in Scotland and is married with two teenage sons.

Julie trained as a journalist and studied Communication and Media but has always wanted to be an author.

She also writes verses and captions for greetings card companies.

When not reading or writing, Julie is a keen walker and loves music.

You can visit Julie’s website, find her on Facebook and follow her on Twitter @G13Julie.

The Enchanted April by Elizabeth von Arnim

The Enchanted april

As my TBR pile is always huge and I frequently don’t get to finish the book for my reading group I have actually read The Enchanted April by Elizabeth von Arnim two weeks early!

Originally published in 1922, my edition of The Enchanted April was published by Penguin Classic in 2012 and is available for purchase through these links.

The Enchanted April

The Enchanted april

The discreet advertisement in The Times, addressed ‘To Those who Appreciate Wistaria and Sunshine’, offers a small medieval castle for rent, above a bay on the Italian Riviera. Four very different women – the dishevelled and downtrodden Mrs Wilkins, the sad, sweet-faced Mrs Arbuthnot, the formidable widow Mrs Fisher and the ravishing socialite Lady Caroline Dester – are drawn to the shores of the Mediterranean that April. As each, in turn, blossoms in the warmth of the Italian spring and finds their spirits stirring, quite unexpected changes occur.

My Review of The Enchanted April

An advertisement in The Times will change the lives of those who respond for ever.

I really enjoyed The Enchanted April. I must admit that it took a chapter or so to attune my modern reader’s eye to the style of a book written almost 100 years ago, but once I did I found it a hugely entertaining read. The underlying sarcasm and humour had me snorting aloud at times. I especially enjoyed the contrast between what each of the four ladies said and what they privately thought. The book is actually very funny and I even found myself reading bits aloud to my husband so that he could enjoy it too.

The Enchanted April is a fascinating insight into the society of between the wars English gentry at all levels. I found the depiction of social mores and snobbery well depicted so that I understood the reasons why each character behaved as they did completely.

Underlying the satirical approach, however, are some themes that are still only too familiar in today’s society. Lady Caroline’s self-worth being measured by men’s attention to her physical beauty, the way in which she abhors their attempts to grasp and pat her, Rose and Lotty’s sad marriages and the emotional isolation that all four women feel in spite of their desire for solitude and time for reflection are concepts many modern readers will appreciate and many will identify with.

But The Enchanted April does not have such a title without reason. The sojourn in Italy will  break down many barriers so that this becomes a very uplifting read as well as an entertaining one. There is enchantment in the setting that is so skilfully conveyed partly through Mrs Wilkins’ ‘seeing’ and partly through the luxurious descriptions that appeal to all the senses from the taste of the food to the scent of the flowers and the sight of the sea. There is magic in the air and it has an almost Shakespearean effect making me think of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

The Enchanted April will not suit all readers – and especially those looking for pacy plotting and rapid, heart racing excitement. But for those wanting an insight into another era, or wanting to follow four women’s self-discovery and burgeoning independence and love it will appeal completely. I really enjoyed it.

About Elizabeth von Arnim

Cousin of Katherine Mansfield and lover of H.G. Wells, Elizabeth von Arnim was at the hub of the literary and political society of her time.

She was born in Australia in 1866 but grew up in England, and began her career in 1898 with the semi-autobiographical Elizabeth and Her German Garden. She was married twice and died in 1941.