The Crash by Robert Peston

My enormous thanks to Tracy Fenton for inviting me to participate in the blog tour for Robert Peston’s latest book The Crash. I’m delighted to share my review today.

Published by Zaffre on 14th September 2023, The Crash is available for purchase here.

The Crash

London, 2007. It’s summer in the City: the economy is booming, profits are up and the stock market sits near record highs.

But journalist Gil Peck is a lone voice worrying it can’t last. Deep in the plumbing of the financial system, he has noticed strange things happening which could threaten the whole economy. But nobody wants to hear it: not the politicians taking credit for an end to boom and bust, not the bankers pocketing vast bonuses, not even Gil’s bosses at the BBC, who think it’s irrelevant.

When Gil gets a tip-off that a small northern bank has run out of money, everything changes. His report sparks the first run on a UK bank in 140 years. The next day, Marilyn Krol, a director of the Bank of England dies in an apparent suicide.

For Gil, it’s personal. Marilyn was his lover: was his scoop connected to her suicide? Or is there something more sinister in her death? Gil is determined to find out.

The more he investigates, the more he is drawn into the rotten heart of the financial system, where old school ties and secret Oxbridge societies lubricate vast and illegal conflicts of interest. The whole economy has been built on a house of cards, and Gil is threatening to bring it down.

When simply reporting the facts can make or break fortunes, Gil has to ask himself: is he crossing the line between journalist and participant? Are his own conflicts of interest making him reckless? And in a world ruled by greed where nothing and no-one is too big to fail, what price will he pay for uncovering the truth?

My Review of The Crash

The financial crash of 2007 is underway.

I confess that at the start of The Crash I wasn’t sure if I would enjoy the book because it is set so firmly in the duplicitous and corrupting worlds of banking, journalism, media and politics that all hold little interest other than frustration and anger for me. Equally, it took me a little while to settle into the writer’s style and I found the acronyms, brand name references and expletives occasionally distracting. There was a slight feeling of trying too hard to impress or shock the reader.

However, once I’d adjusted to the style and settled into what is a clever and entertaining plot in The Crash, those initial reservations dissipated. The continuous present tense gives a feeling of immediacy that is engaging. I think what works so well too is that recent real world events, historical and recent international banking crises, foreign interference in domestic UK affairs, and so on, all feel completely plausible and are woven through the action with complete authority by Robert Peston. The reader has the satisfaction of knowing that this is an author who knows what he’s writing about which makes it easier to slip into accepting and enjoying the narrative.

Aside from these large politicised elements, there are many more prosaic, and somehow more humane, themes that made the story attractive to me. Family and grief, personal relationships and love, trust, loyalty and friendship all lurk in the pages so that I think The Crash offers more to the casual reader than I first thought. 

Gil’s previous life is dripped into this story carefully so that the reader has a good idea of who he is and his narrative voice – almost an inner monologue – creates a sense of him incredibly vividly, making him hard to resist and I soon found myself caught up in Gil’s world. He’s a multi layered and flawed individual who feels realistic and human. His relationships with his mother and with Jess ameliorate his obsessive and frequently manic elements really well so that I became drawn to him.

There’s a wide range of other characters that blends real people known to the reader with fictional portraits very cleverly, so that at times it’s hard to know what’s fact and what is fiction. I found this a highly effective aspect of the text because it pulled me into the scenarios, making them intriguing and engaging. 

I began The Crash thinking I might not actually read it and ended it glad I had. The Crash is exciting, fast paced and engaging. It educates and entertains. It contains greater humanity than I had anticipated and Robert Peston has illustrated that he is a skilled and knowledgeable author who can hook even the most reluctant reader. He convinced me!

About Robert Peston

Robert James Kenneth Peston is an English journalist, presenter, and author. He is the political editor of ITV News and host of the weekly political discussion show Peston. From 2006 until 2014, he was the business editor of BBC News and its economics editor from 2014 to 2015.

For further information, follow Robert on Twitter @Peston and find him on Facebook and Instagram.

There’s more with these other bloggers too:

Fifteen Wild Decembers by Karen Powell

Having completed my degree dissertation on Charlotte Bronte, I was intrigued to discover that Karen Powell’s Fifteen Wild Decembers reimagines Emily Bronte’s life because I know less about her, and so I was thrilled when lovely Daniela Petracco at Europa sent me a copy in return for an honest review that I’m delighted to share that review today.

Fifteen Wild Decembers will be published by Europa on 21st September 2023 and is available for purchase here.

Fifteen Wild Decembers

Isolated from society, Emily Brontë and her siblings spend their days inventing elaborate fictional realms or roaming the wild moors above their family home in Yorkshire. When the time comes for them to venture out into the world to earn a living, each of them struggles to adapt, but for Emily the change is catastrophic. Torn from the landscape to which she has become so passionately bound, she is simply unable to function.

To the outside world, Emily Brontë appears taciturn and unexceptional, but beneath the surface her mind is in a creative ferment. A violent phenomenon is about to burst forth that will fuse her imaginary world with the landscape of her beloved Yorkshire and change the literary world forever.

Fifteen Wild Decembers is the dazzling second novel from a writer who has been compared to Shirley Hazzard and Graham Greene, and whose first novel was described as ‘utterly stunning’, ‘mesmerizing’ and hailed as ‘a masterpiece.’

My Review of Fifteen Wild Decembers

A re-imagining of the life of Emily Bronte.

Oh my goodness! Fifteen Wild Decembers is exactly my kind of read. I absolutely adored it with a kind of visceral physicality. 

The writing is quite wonderful. So many times Karen Powell uses a beautiful, imaginative turn of phrase that had me metaphorically exclaiming ‘Yes!’ to myself.  She has that ability to describe in ways the reader can only dream about, making Fifteen Wild Decembers not just an engaging narrative, but an immersive and captivating one too, placing the reader right at the heart of the novel. There’s beauty and brutality here and despite already knowing many of the details upon which the novel is based, I found myself totally undone by its ending.

Emily Bronte’s voice is clear, convincing and strong so that the imagined elements of the story feel realistic, authentic and compelling. The foreshadowing of Wuthering Heights through Emily’s inner thoughts, passions and desires is dramatic, plausible and astounding, making for a read that is entertaining, intelligent and mesmerising. I think it’s her first person voice that creates this effect so brilliantly.

The plot of Fifteen Wild Decembers is both familiar and innovative so that readers can find personal hooks that feel intimate and satisfying, whilst other aspects are developed to create superb insight and entertainment. I especially loved the relationships between the Bronte siblings because they held a different perspective and made me consider my own beliefs about all the family afresh.

With feminism, domestic life, ambition and mental health as a supporting backdrop, Fifteen Wild Decembers is modern and affecting even as it is historically and literarily satisfying.

I’m aware I haven’t said a great deal about the book but I’m not sure I could have loved Fifteen Wild Decembers more. It’s a fabulous book and not to be missed.

About Karen Powell

Karen Powell was born in Rochester, Kent. She left school at 16 but returned to education as a mature student to study English Literature at Lucy Cavendish College, Cambridge. She lives in North Yorkshire. An early draft of The River Within was awarded a Northern Writers’ TLC ‘New Fiction Reads’ prize, which seeks to support work-in-progress by new, emerging and established writers across the North of England.

For further information follow Karen on Twitter/X @karenlpowell1. You’ll also find Karen on Instagram

New Dreams at Polkerran Point by Cass Grafton

My enormous thanks to Kate Shepherd for sending me a copy of New Dreams at Polkerran Point by Cass Grafton in return for an honest review. It’s my pleasure to share that review today.

New Dreams at Polkerran Point is published by Canelo on 21st September 2023 and is available for purchase through the links here.

New Dreams at Polkerran Point

A surprise inheritance will open the doors to her future, and also the past…

When Aunt Meg leaves her cottage to Anna Redding in her will, Anna immediately packs up and heads to Polkerran, the Cornish fishing village where she was so happy as a child.

With ambitions to turn the cottage into a B&B, a job working for the enigmatic historian, Oliver Seymour, and the return of her childhood crush, Alex Tremayne, it seems the stars have all aligned for Anna.

But Aunt Meg left behind a mystery for her to solve, and a shock discovery reveals she may be living a dream that isn’t really hers to hold. Can Anna rescue the new life she’s made for herself? Who in Polkerran can she really count on in her time of need?

Previously published as The Cottage in the Cornish Cove.

My Review of New Dreams at Polkerran Point

Anna’s life is about to change.

New Dreams at Polkerran Point is just lovely. It’s perfect escapism wrapped in an engaging and absorbing story that I loved. There’s a smooth and engaging style to the writing, with natural dialogue and a lovely smattering of humour that adds colour and makes it feel as if the things taking place are true rather than fictionalised. I found myself thinking about the book during the times when I wasn’t reading it because I felt so drawn to the story. I thought the literary quotations from authors like Austen, Bronte and Hardy at the start of each chapter were quite perfect. 

The way Aunt Meg steers and influences events even though she has already passed away is beautifully handled by Cass Grafton and Meg’s presence really drives this hugely entertaining and interesting plot. There’s a mystery to be solved involving her that adds another layer of interest to this beautifully depicted romance. 

What works so well for me in New Dreams at Polkerran Point is the way Anna takes time to realise just what it is she is looking for in her life. She’s surprisingly conventional in her desires, but Cass Grafton still makes her multi-layered and fascinating. Indeed, I loved meeting all the characters, especially Oliver who feels three dimensional from the very first time we encounter him, to Mrs Lovelace who brings such gentle humour through her malapropisms. I’m hoping to encounter more of the folk of Polkerran in future stories.

Equally, Polkerran feels just as much a character as the people. The descriptions, the sense of close knit community, reference to the ways Cornish villages are threatened and invaded by outsiders all serve to place the reader at its heart. 

New Dreams at Polkerran Point is absolutely smashing. Written with heart and understanding, it leaves the reader with a warm feeling of fulfilment. I thought it was gorgeous.

About Cass Grafton

Cass began her writing life in Regency England, enlisted Jane Austen’s help to time-travel between then and the present day and is now happily ensconced in 21st century Cornwall. 

Well, in her imagination and soul; her heart and physical presence reside in northern England with her ever-patient husband and Tig and Tag, their cute but exceptionally demanding moggies. 

A bit of a nomad, Cass has called three countries home, as well as six different English counties, but her aspiration is to one day reunite with her beloved West Country.

In the meantime, she writes feel-good contemporary romances set in Cornwall and, in doing so, manages to live there vicariously through her characters and settings.

An Ambassador for the Jane Austen Literacy Foundation, Cass is also a member of the Romantic Novelists’ Association, the Jane Austen Society UK and the Society of Authors.

For further information, follow Cass on Twitter @CassGrafton and find her on Facebook and Instagram.

Harlem After Midnight by Louise Hare

I so loved Louise Hare’s Miss Aldridge Regrets (reviewed here) that I was thrilled when Becci Mansell at HQ sent me a copy of the follow up book Harlem After Midnight and I’m delighted to share my review of Harlem After Midnight today.

Harlem After Midnight will be published by Harper Collins imprint HQ on 16th September and is available for purchase through the links here.

Harlem After Midnight

1936, September 17th, 1am…

In the middle of Harlem, in the dead of night, a woman falls from a second storey window. In her hand, she holds a passport and the name written on it is Lena Aldridge…

Nine days earlier…

Lena arrived in Harlem less than two weeks ago, full of hope for her burgeoning romance with Will Goodman, the handsome musician she met on board the Queen Mary. Will has arranged for Lena to stay with friends of his, and this will give her the chance to find out if their relationship is going anywhere. But there is another reason she’s in Harlem – to find out what happened in 1908 to make her father flee to London.

As Lena’s investigations progress, not only does she realise her father lied to her, but the man she’s falling too fast and too hard for has secrets of his own. And those secrets have put Lena in terrible danger…

My Review of Harlem After Midnight

Lena has arrived in New York.

What an absolute pleasure to be back in the company of Lena Aldridge. Although you don’t need to have read the first book about her, Miss Aldridge Regrets, I think there’s more to gain from Harlem After Midnight if you have read it so that all references to Lena’s voyage to New York are easier to grasp. 

Darker than Miss Aldridge Regrets, although with fewer deaths, Harlem After Midnight feels like a natural progression that advances Lena’s present life and uncovers more of her past – both for Lena herself and the reader. I think what is so effective is that whilst some of the events, like Alfie’s reason for being in New York, are firmly rooted in the social era of the early 1900s, they are totally convincing and sadly all too relevant for today’s society too, making Harlem After Midnight historically immersive and thematically compelling. 

Louise Hare encompasses racism, feminism, religion, the patriarchy, family, sexism, manipulation and romance in a heady mix of superb writing that impacts the reader and educates without them even realising as they get caught up in the story and the developing relationship between Lena and Will. There’s a real feeling that this author understands humanity in all its failings and strengths and Louise Hare carries her reader with her entirely effectively.

I thought the characters were brilliantly drawn. As Lena’s first person narrative develops her personality, so she gradually uncovers the depth and nuances of Will et al – including New York in general and Harlem in particular, both areas being every bit as much a character as the people. The shifting sands of relationship between Will and Bel are fascinating to read about. I loved being immersed in the social hierarchy of class and colour, being taken into the clubs and hotels of New York and into the homes and lives of those like Claudette and Louis. There’s a fabulous appeal to the senses through the music, food and clothes of the era that is sumptuous and really brings the narrative alive.

I thought the pace was perfectly pitched. It feels surprisingly gentle for a while until the reader realises what clever plotting this is. Seeds of information, twists and details are all scattered through the story and drawn together into an emotional and satisfying ending, even though I hope the story doesn’t end here and that there will be future books about some of these characters. 

Beautifully written, Harlem After Midnight is a curious book. Whilst it engages and entertains so brilliantly, it seems to have even greater impact after it is finished and the reader reflects on it, because concepts of belonging, loyalty and self sacrifice only truly become obvious right at the end. I thoroughly enjoyed it and really recommend it.

About Louise Hare

Louise Hare is a London-based writer and has an MA in Creative Writing from Birkbeck, University of London. Originally from Warrington, the capital is the inspiration for much of her work, including This Lovely City, which began life after a trip into the deep level shelter below Clapham Common. This Lovely City was featured on the inaugural BBC TWO TV book club show, Between the Covers, and has received multiple accolades, securing Louise’s place as an author to watch.

Find out more by visiting Louise’s website, following her on Twitter @LouRHare, and finding Louise on Instagram and Facebook.

The Mitford Murders by Jessica Fellowes

I’ll be at book group this afternoon, having afternoon tea and discussing The Mitford Murders by Jessica Fellowes. It’s a pleasure to share my review of The Mitford Murders too today.

The Mitford Murders was published by Little Brown imprint Sphere in paperback on 5th April 2017 and is available for purchase through the links here.

The Mitford Murders

Lose yourself in the sumptuous first novel in a new series of Golden Age mysteries set amid the lives of the glamorous Mitford sisters.

It’s 1919, and Louisa Cannon dreams of escaping her life of poverty in London, and most of all her oppressive and dangerous uncle.

Louisa’s salvation is a position within the Mitford household at Asthall Manor, in the Oxfordshire countryside. There she will become nurserymaid, chaperone and confidante to the Mitford sisters, especially sixteen-year-old Nancy – an acerbic, bright young woman in love with stories.

But when a nurse – Florence Nightingale Shore, goddaughter of her famous namesake – is killed on a train in broad daylight, Nancy and amateur sleuth Louisa find that in postwar England, everyone has something to hide . . . 

My Review of The Mitford Murders

Nurse Florence Nightingale Shore has been murdered.

The Mitford Murders is written with a lively style that means the story moves along satisfyingly, keeping the reader entertained. There’s an underlying wit, especially with regard to Gus’s superiors that I thoroughly enjoyed. I thought the style suited the context of the story very aptly.

I also thought the historical era was very well depicted, with both social class and conventions realistically conveyed so that there was an authentic feel to the story. Reading The Mitford Murders made me quite glad not to have been a woman of Louisa’s standing born in the times we have here. The underlying snobbery of society, the constraints on women Fellowes has researched far more than she has included in The Mitford Murders which makes the story realistic. More so, is the underlying trauma of World War One that acts as a profound backdrop to a story that initially feels more of a diverting caper than a crime, despite the murder of Nurse Shore, giving it a depth I hadn’t expected. 

There were occasions early in the story where I wondered where the plot was headed, but as the threads come together, the connections between characters are made and the narrative reaches its conclusion I realised that this is a thoroughly well-plotted narrative and that the clues are there all along. 

There’s a cracking cast of characters here with a super balance between getting to know the clearly developed Louisa, Gus and Nancy thoroughly, setting up future books enticingly, whilst having an interesting range of supporting people to add colour and interest. The imperiousness of Lady Redesdale, for example, is the perfect foil to the bluster of her hard pressed husband.

There’s a little bit of everything in The Mitford Murders so that it appeals to readers of historical fiction, mystery, romance and murder, all woven together competently and engagingly. I feel this story would make an excellent television drama series too and it comes as no surprise to discover Jessica Fellowes is the niece of Julian Fellowes and has written companion books to Downton Abbey. I enjoyed it a great deal. 

About Jessica Fellowes

Jessica Fellowes is the author of The Mitford Murders, niece of Julian Fellowes and a public speaker on Downton Abbey in the UK and USA. She has been a celebrity interviewer and lifestyle writer and was Deputy Editor of Country Life.

For further information, visit Jessica’s website follow her on Twitter @jessicafellowes and find her on Facebook and Instagram.

A Trio of Little Experts Books from James May, Dr Ronx and Deborah Meaden

It’s a special BOGTF on Linda’s Book Bag today as I review not one, but three, children’s books from the Red Shed Little Experts Series: Marvellous Vehicles by James May, Amazing Bodies by Dr Ronx and Why Money Matters by Deborah Meaden. Little Experts is an unmissable series that will empower and inspire a new generation of experts.

Normally I try not to blog at the weekends but having had some time away over August, with a huge backlog of full reviews to put out here on the blog for the books I’ve read and featured in The People’s Friend and My Weekly magazines, I can’t otherwise fit everything in!

My huge thanks to the team at FMcM for sending the books to me in return for honest reviews.

All three Little Experts books are available for purchase through the links here.

Marvellous Vehicles

Mad about marvellous vehicles? Hit the road with writer and broadcaster James May to discover incredible human-powered vehicles – from bicycles and submarines to amphibious vehicles and even a helicopter. Yes, really!

Our EXPERTS are famous for their incredible know-how and passion for their subjects, and now they have made it their mission to share that knowledge with you in LITTLE EXPERTS: the inspirational new non-fiction series for six- to nine-year-olds.

This jaw-dropping non-fiction journey has bright, inclusive and stylish artwork throughout by Emans.

Marvellous Vehicles is available for purchase here.

My Review of Marvellous Vehicles

All about human powered vehicles.

I was taken aback by Marvellous Vehicles as the level of science and technology is high so that I learnt a great deal, but it is presented in such a manner as to be accessible and understood by young readers.

From James May’s introduction to his final sentence, he adopts a conversational style peppered with anecdotes that balance the more educational aspects and make readers feel as if he is addressing them directly. His questions and suggestions mean that children feel inspired to discover more, to have a go at vehicle design and I can imagine a life-long passion being engendered by Marvellous Vehicles. I was delighted to see reference to vehicles for physically challenged readers too. 

As well as science and technology, Marvellous Vehicles touches on history so that there’s the potential to research beyond the confines of the text, perhaps looking at Leonardo da Vinci or the history of flight. There’s a helpful glossary of terms at the back of the book that supports literacy and understanding too.

With bright, engaging and colourful illustrations by Emans and a good balance of space, text and image, Marvellous Vehicles is an engaging, informative and entertaining book. 

*

As with other Little Experts books, the physical book of Marvellous Vehicles is a good weight and size for children’s hands and has a robust cover that makes it idea for home or school use.

About James May

James May is a writer and broadcaster. He’s best known for co-presenting The Grand Tour and Top Gear, and his previous books for adults include Carbolics and Car Fever. This is James’s first official book for children.

You’ll find James May on Twitter @MrJamesMay.

Amazing Bodies

Inspired by the incredible human body? Take a tour with Dr Ronx – TV presenter on CBBC’s Operation Ouch! and an award-winning trans non-binary emergency doctor – to discover spongy brains, gooey guts and everything in between.

Our EXPERTS are famous for their incredible know-how and passion for their subjects, and now they have made it their mission to share that knowledge with you in LITTLE EXPERTS: the inspirational new non-fiction series for six- to nine-year-olds.

This jaw-dropping non-fiction journey has colourful, engaging and inclusive artwork throughout by Ashton Attzs.

My Review of Amazing Bodies

An exploration of the human body.

What a wonderful example for children to have access to a book from someone non-binary that makes no special fuss over the matter so that Amazing Bodies feels totally inclusive. I loved the personal introduction from Dr Ronx too.

Amazing Bodies is filled with the kind of detail and humour children love. Who knew, for example, that during our lives we shed a similar weight in skin cells to that of eight cats! The book is a whistle stop tour of the human body but it is absolutely rammed with interesting facts that will capture children’s imaginations.

The one aspect that I thought was truly inspired in Amazing Bodies was the interactive engagement to be had by trying out the suggestions made by Dr Ronx to find different muscles or your pulse for example.

Amazing Bodies has a smashing combination of text and detail supported by vibrant and helpful illustrations by Ashton Attzs, with a glossary of helpful words at the end. I thought it was an absolutely cracking children’s book and it’s my favourite of the series so far.

*

As with other Little Experts books, the physical book of Amazing Bodies is a good weight and size for children’s hands and has a robust cover that makes it idea for home or school use.

About Dr Ronx

Dr Ronx is an award-winning trans non-binary emergency medicine doctor, TV presenter and loveable loudmouth with an unwavering desire to be the representation that young people need to see more of.

Why Money Matters

Mystified by money? Discover how it shapes the world we live in with Dragons’ Den investor and entrepreneur Deborah Meaden.

Our EXPERTS are famous for their incredible know-how and passion for their subjects, and now they have made it their mission to share that knowledge with you in LITTLE EXPERTS: the inspirational new non-fiction series for six- to nine-year-olds.

This jaw-dropping non-fiction journey has vibrant and inclusive artwork throughout by Hao Hao.

My Review of Why Money Matters

The history and use of money.

Forget young children, Deborah Meaden’s Why Money Matters could revolutionise the lives of adults of all ages too as she explains not just how the coins and paper money we use today have come about, but also how to budget and what it means to save and borrow. 

Certainly there’s history and geography present between the pages of Why Money Matters, which could stimulate further research (employment as a snake venom collector anyone?) and engagement, but what works so well is the use of everyday examples for children to explain terms like ‘compound interest’. I thought it inspired to involve young readers by asking then to think where government taxes might be spent in their own environments. There are several activities in the book that children can carry out to make them more financially aware. 

As with other Little Experts books, there’s a personal introduction from the author and a useful glossary at the end. Similarly, the illustrations by Hao Hao really bring the details to life, being bright, colourful and stylistically appealing to the target audience.

I’m not sure all young readers will go from selling a few garden flowers at the age of 7 to being a wealthy entrepreneur like Deborah Meaden’s, but Why Money Matters gives them an interesting, engaging and entertaining first step in dealing with money along the way! It’s an important book for children.

*

As with other Little Experts books, the physical book of Why Money Matters is a good weight and size for children’s hands and has a robust cover that makes it idea for home or school use.

About Deborah Meaden

Deborah Meaden is a highly-successful entrepreneur and one of Britain’s best-known business names. Deborah has been an investor on Dragons’ Den since 2006 and she also hosts BBC Radio 5 Live’s The Big Green Money Show podcast.

You can find Deborah on Twitter @DeborahMeaden.

Cover Reveal: Cat Society by Ray Sadri

Regular readers of Linda’s Book Bag will know how much I like being part of a book’s early life. Those who know me personally will know I am a huge cat lover. Consequently, combining twin passions of books and cats, it gives me great pleasure to reveal the brand new Cat Society by Ray Sadri today. I was thrilled when Ray asked me if I’d like to do this.

Let me give you all the details:

Cat Society

Cat Society is a witty and bonkers story of life and politics in Westminster – reimagining the debates, events and headlines of recent years had the world been run by cats. A lot changes. A lot doesn’t.

The country is on the brink of bankruptcy, and backbencher Douglas Schnitty is disappointed with the thousands of homeless cats sleeping by the bins. He gets frustrated with higher powers who only seem to care about their own interests and preserving the country’s finances.

He schmoozes and sabotages his way through the political elite, from assisting the bombastic Hector Perp Pahpousson to disrupting the plans of the Prime Minister. Can his conscience save him, and the slum cats, as events spiral out of control?

Doesn’t that sound utterly mad and intriguing? I can’t wait to read Cat Society.

Cat Society will be released on 28th September 2023 by the Book Guild and is available for pre-order in all the usual places including Waterstones, Foyles and Amazon.

About Ray Sadri

Ray is on a mission to provide laughs and entertainment through beautifully simple, silly, and often downright bonkers literature. With cats.

He has been a radio journalist, a central government Chief Press Officer, and now runs campaigns in the worlds of politics and business. He lives with his fiance, baby boy, and Norwegian Forest Cat, Mads — who naturally reigns supreme in the family. Ray has realised, after spending many years living with cats and working with politicians, that the two share a great deal in common. They can be intelligent, cunning, cute and lethal in equal measures. It is this realisation that helped him dream up the concept of Cat Society.

For further information  about Ray (and the cats), follow them on Twitter @CatSocietyUK, visit the website or find him on Instagram and Facebook.

Alone by Daniel Schreiber translated by Ben Fergusson

My grateful thanks to Helen McCusker for sending me a copy of Alone by Daniel Schreiber translated by Ben Fergusson and to Fran Roberts at Reaktion Books for inviting me to be part of the blog tour. I’m very pleased to be able to share my review of Alone today.

Published by Reaktion Books on 1st August 2023, Alone is available for purchase here.

Alone

At no time before have so many people lived alone, and never has loneliness been so widely or keenly felt. Why, in a society of individualists, is living alone perceived as a shameful failure? And can we ever be happy on our own?

Drawing on personal experience, as well as philosophy and sociology, Daniel Schreiber explores the tension between the desire for solitude and freedom, and for companionship, intimacy and love. Along the way he illuminates the role that friendships play in our lives – can they be a response to the loss of meaning in a world in crisis?

A profoundly enlightening book, Alone explores how we want to live.

My Review of Alone

An insight into loneliness and living alone.

Alone was absolutely not what I was expecting. I thought I was going to read a novella, then, upon opening it, a series of short stories. I had not expected a personal and universal set of essays that are part memoir, part biography, part social history and which are an immersive, touching and insightful illustration of loneliness at all levels and the way we frequently live our modern lives. The elements relating to the recent Covid pandemic, for example, felt scalpel sharp and almost painful to read.

Indeed, Alone is not an easy read. Despite being beautifully translated by Ben Fergusson, the theme of loneliness is itself affecting, but this is a book firmly rooted in research as well as personal illustration so that there are many footnotes and references to consider. I found it best simply to read the eight chapters or essays and then reread them, this time taking account of the background aspects so that the initial flow of reading was not interrupted. One of the elements I so enjoyed about Alone is the way Daniel Schreiber took me back to my days of studying philosophy as part of my first degree. Not only did he provide an interesting and engaging book, that affords the reader recognition and resonance, but he reignited an interest that had lain dormant for forty years. I can envisage readers being so hooked and fascinated that Alone will take on a life and relevance beyond its covers, with further reading and considerable reflection to be had.

There is an issue with Alone for a heterosexual middle aged reader like me in a long and happy relationship. It’s very unsettling. Daniel Schreiber made me feel uncomfortable and slightly ashamed of myself for blithely meandering along, ignorant of so many more difficulties encountered by men (and women) with his experience. I had no idea, for example, that it wasn’t until 1990 that the World Health Organisation no longer defined homosexuality as a mental illness. There were aspects to this text that I found desperately sad and enraging. Reading Alone uncovered so much I’d previously been unaware of so that whilst I felt educated, it had the effect of making me feel rather ignorant and somewhat embarrassed by that ignorance. That said, there is both hope and optimism here even as it makes the reader reconsider their own life. Alone is by no means depressing, but it is a brutal and tender look at the way loneliness affects the individual.

If you’re looking for a light-hearted beach read that you’ll probably forget the moment the last page is turned, don’t read Alone. If, however, you want writing that looks at the human condition at all levels from the individual to the global, then Alone is exactly the right book. Intense, intelligent and interesting, Alone deserves several readings merely to scratch the surface of meaning and theme. I thought it was fascinating, being a book about, and for, the modern era. It won’t suit all readers, but unless you give it a try, you won’t know if it affects you as much as it impacted me.

About Daniel Schreiber

Daniel Schreiber is the author of Susan Sontag, the first complete biography of the intellectual icon (2014, translated by David Dollenmayer), as well as the highly praised and bestselling literary essays Nüchtern (2014) and Zuhause (2017). He lives in Berlin.

About Ben Fergusson

Ben Fergusson is an award-winning writer and translator. He is the author of three novels, most recently An Honest Man (2019). His debut, The Spring of Kasper Meier (2014), won the 2015 Betty Trask Prize, the HWA Debut Crown and was shortlisted for the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award. In 2022, he published his first book of non-fiction, Tales from the Fatherland. He has translated numerous texts from German by writers including Daniel Schreiber, Daniel Kehlmann, Alain Claude Sulzer, Byung-Chul Han and Antje Wagner, and in 2020 won a Stephen Spender Prize for poetry in translation. He is a Senior Lecturer in Creative Writing at Cardiff Metropolitan University.

For further information visit Ben’s website and follow him on Twitter @BenFergusson and Instagram.

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Lottie’s School of Dance by Annette Hannah

What a pleasure to be on the blog tour for author and friend Annette Hannah’s latest book Lottie’s School of Dance.

It’s too long since Annette featured here on Linda’s Book Bag when I reviewed Poppy’s Christmas Wishes. Prior to that I reviewed Annette’s The Cosy Little Cupcake Van here and Annette has also featured here when I reviewed her debut novel Wedding Bells at the Signal Box Café and we stayed in together to chat all about it.

Published by Orion Dash on 31st August 2023, Lottie’s School of Dance is available for purchase here.

Lottie’s School of Dance

Lottie Daniels is dancing up the altar in Canada when she realises her whirlwind wedding is a big mistake. Chad isn’t the right person for her at all! And, in that moment, Lottie goes from dancing bride to runaway bride.

Much to her brother’s relief, Lottie decides to return to Bramblewood in the UK. But life has more surprises in store for her. After rescuing both a donkey and a little old lady called Doris – all with the help of a handsome stranger! – Lottie suddenly becomes a big part of Doris’s life. And in return for her company and doing bits around the farm, Doris offers her the barn to run her dance classes.

From broken dreams to second chances, Lottie finally has a chance to rebuild her life. And with an exciting dance audition to prepare for, who knows what might happen next?!

You are guaranteed to fall head over heels with this sweet and charming romance.

My Review of Lottie’s School of Dance

Lottie’s about to get married.

Lottie’s School of Dance is a lovely story, being entertaining, engaging, humorous and romantic. Indeed, I think Annette Hannah has found her voice in this genre very very clearly. There’s always a warm sense of community in her books and a strong sense of loyalty and friendship that I find so uplifting in what is often a depressing and aggressive world. Lottie’s School of Dance is the kind of uplit we could all benefit from. I loved the way characters I’ve met previously in Annette Hannah’s books popped into the narrative but anyone reading this book could do so perfectly happily without ever having read other books by the author.

Equally, I so appreciated the age range of the characters because many, like Doris, are older but show that they still have life, interest and vitality. They prove that romance isn’t merely the domain of twenty to thirty somethings. That said, I was totally invested in Lottie’s story and found myself more than a little in love with Marco too. I thought using Denni as a catalyst for much of the action was inspired. Who couldn’t help loving him? You’ll have to read Lottie’s School of Dance for yourself to find out why! 

I do have one issue with Lottie’s School of Dance because Annette Hannah appeals to the reader’s senses and has such glorious references to food and taste that, frequently, reading the book made me ravenous. However, given that she also made me want to get dancing too in order to burn off the calories I think I consumed just reading about Lottie, I’ll forgive her. I loved the reference to real singers and songs because they added a layer of authenticity to the story. The descriptions here are totally convincing.

I think what I enjoyed so much about Lottie’s School of Dance is the way it made me feel. There’s drama and tension resulting from the dance competition, but there was never a moment when I thought things wouldn’t resolve themselves satisfactorily, and in the present climate of war, climate change and general negativity, this book gave me sheer respite and escapism. I highly recommend that you give yourself a break from life and simply enjoy meeting Lottie for yourself. It’s a gorgeous story.

About Annette Hannah

Annette Hannah Author Pic

Annette Hannah is a Liver Bird who relocated to leafy Hertfordshire in the 80’s and now lives near a river with her husband, two of their three grown up children and a crazy black cocker spaniel. She writes Romantic comedies in settings inspired by the beautiful countryside around her and always with a nod to her hometown.

She worked in Marketing for many years as a qualified Marketeer which she loved as it tapped into her creative side. As an avid reader, she began to review the books she read, became a book blogger and eventually plucked up the courage to fulfil her life long dream of writing a book.

For four years she was a member of the Romantic Novelists’ Association’s new writers’ scheme, during which time she wrote a book a year. After signing a two book deal with Orion Dash in 2020 she graduated to full member of the organisation and is also their Press Officer. She loves long walks along the river, travelling to far flung places and spending time with her friends and family.

You can find out more by visiting Annette’s blog or website and following her on Instagram and Twitter @AnnetteHannah.

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How to be a French Girl by Rose Cleary

My enormous thanks to Ned at FMcM for sending me a copy of How to be a French Girl by Rose Cleary in return for an honest review. I was disappointed not to be able to participate in the blog tour, but with my Mum’s 90th birthday celebrations, her continuing illness and going away for our 40th wedding anniversary, I simply couldn’t fit it in. However, I’m delighted to share my review today.

Published by Weatherglass on 10th August 2023, How to be a French Girl is available for purchase here.

How to be a French Girl

If you no longer want to be you, be careful who you become.

She’s from Southend. She wanted to be an artist and ended up at the best art school in the country. But that didn’t work out.

Now she works as a receptionist in an IT firm, where her only creative outlet is arranging the sandwiches she’s ordered in for other people’s meetings. And she still lives in Southend.

Outside work, soulless sex has become a symptom of her boredom.

Then Gustav appears: older, perceptive, attentive. And French.

He’s her way out, she thinks. But more than that, a chance to be creative again: to become someone new.

How to be a French Girl is a fierce, disturbing and funny debut novel about desire, art and what we’ll risk to change ourselves.

My Review of How to be a French Girl

The girl wants her life to change.

Brimming with ennui that is pitch perfect, the atmosphere in How to be a French Girl is mesmerising as Rose Cleary illustrates the modern condition of loneliness and the need to be someone – anyone – with razor sharp accuracy. 

This is a kind of road crash of a book you want to read through your fingers as the protagonist spirals into more desperate and mad behaviour. I found myself exclaiming aloud, begging her not to take whatever action she was about to do. The image of her prosaic working life is astonishingly depicted. She is a small, nameless nobody in a huge corporation whom Rose Cleary ironically sees with total focus and wry humour. 

There’s a riveting sense that any one of us could descend into the madness of the girl in this story that makes reading How to be a French Girl hugely entertaining and not a little terrifying. This sensation is compounded by the fact the protagonist is never named. She is just a young woman, any young woman or an everywoman. There’s very much the sense that, if we were brave enough, or desperate enough, all of us could behave as she does. 

How to be a French Girl is written with such insight and skill. The lack of speech marks enhances the concept that the girl has no real place in society, as if she is not fully formed because even what she says is unformed. Similarly the lack of such punctuation gives the sensation of a lack of control; the concept that the girl could spin beyond the confines of convention at any moment. Add in her rash casual sexual liaisons, her stifled creative talent, her poverty and even her rotting tooth and throughout there is a tension as well as a dry, sardonic humour, suggesting that something is going to give.

I really enjoyed How to be a French Girl. It has both universality and individuality in a nuanced blend of convention and anarchy. I think it might divide readers, but I can’t envisage any reader not having an opinion as a result of Rose Cleary’s clever narrative. Try it for yourself! 

About Rose Cleary

Rose Cleary, born 1990, is an author and writer from Essex. Her writing has been previously published in New Socialist, The Southend’s Twilight Worlds, Hyperallergic and TOMA. She has exhibited her art internationally at galleries including Nahmad Projects and The Vaults in London, and Backlit Gallery in Nottingham. How to be a French Girl is her debut novel.

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