Wednesday, 15 February 2017

Bibliomaniac's Book Club: The Girls by Lisa Jewell



BIBLIOMANIA FOR 
LISA JEWELL: THE GIRLS


I have produced this Book Club Guide in response to a friend's Book Club who chose the novel and had a great session suggesting it! Lisa Jewell's books are very readable and enjoyable. They will suit book clubs looking for a light read but a read with a story that will give them plenty of things to chat about! 



The Girls
What is the book about?

This story is set in London, where the picturesque houses encircle a communal garden. Everyone knows everyone. The children roam freely, in and out of each other's houses and as familiar with each other as siblings. When Clare moves in with her daughters Grace and Pip, aged eleven and twelve, she thinks she has found a real oasis for them - especially considering the recent traumatic events they have lived through.

But then one night Grace is found unconscious in a dark corner of the garden. What happened? Who did this?


Published in May 2016 by Arrow Publishers 

My review of The Girls:
Bibliomaniac's review of The Girls by Lisa Jewell
Shoebox Prompt Box
Use these items to help you start chatting at the beginning of the evening 

  • Candles  - tea lights in lanterns
  • pen, paper and envelopes
  • a copy of the map of Virginia Crescent and Virginia Terrace from the front of the book
  • some properties for sale in London suburbs from Estate Agents
  • some seeds and a trowel
  • a rabbit (a cuddly toy version will do in this occasion!) 
  • a bottle of champagne
  • a birthday card for a 13 year old girl

Questions for Book Group:


Who did you think was responsible for what happened to Grace? Did you opinion change at all at any point in the novel? If so, when and why?

How effectively does Jewell use red herrings in the novel? Were there any red herrings that caught you out?

What did you think of Adele's decision to home school?  Did she do it well?  Would you do it? 

What did you think of Clare's parenting? Was she right to keep the release of the girls' father from them? Why?

What observations do you think Jewell was trying to make about parenting? Which parent did you feel most critical of/ most sympathetic towards? Why? 

Adele asserts that "with parenting there’s a long game and a short game. The aim of the short game is to make your children bearable to live with. Easy to transport. Well behaved in public place . . . But the aim of the long game is to produce a good human being." Do you agree with her belief that you can "skip" the short game? Is there a middle ground between her viewpoint and Gordon’s discipline-focused approach?

What observations do you think Jewell is making about families? 

Is Jewell's presentation of mothers authentic and believable or too extreme? 

Which character do you think displayed the most 'moral' behaviour? And which was the least 'moral'? 

Did you think Grace was mature for her age? Was she an authentic character?

What did you think about Pip and her 'journey' throughout the novel? How does she change during her time living here? 

What draws Clare to Leo? Is her attraction to him based more on her own circumstances or something about him?

Why do you think Lisa Jewell wrote primarily from Pip, Clare and Adele’s perspectives? What do these narrators have in common? What is unique about their different standpoints, and how does this affect the story?

Did you relate to any of the girls or parents more than the others? In what ways? Which character did you like the most? And which did you dislike?

Do you think you would enjoy living in a home with a communal garden like the one described? What are some of the benefits and drawbacks?
Why does Adele ultimately look after Tyler? Are her motives purely selfless?
Do you think Adele does the right thing by keeping quiet after she discovers what happened to Grace? What would you have done in her position?
What sort of adult or mother do you think Tyler will grow up to become?

This is a story about secrets – is it ever better to keep a secret than to share?


Lisa Jewell

Author Information:
Lisa was born in London in 1968. Her mother was a secretary and her father was a textile agent and she was brought up in the northernmost reaches of London with her two younger sisters. She was educated at a Catholic girls’ Grammar school in Finchley. After leaving school at sixteen she spent two years at Barnet College doing an arts foundation course and then two years at Epsom School of Art & Design studying Fashion Illustration and Communication.
She worked for the fashion chain Warehouse for three years as a PR assistant and then for Thomas Pink, the Jermyn Street shirt company for four years as a receptionist and PA. She started her first novel, Ralph’s Party, for a bet in 1996. She finished it in 1997 and it was published by Penguin books in May 1998. It went on to become the best-selling debut novel of that year.
She has since written a further nine novels, as is currently at work on her eleventh.
She now lives in an innermost part of north London with her husband Jascha, an IT consultant, her daughters, Amelie and Evie and her silver tabbies, Jack and Milly.
www.lisa-jewell.co.uk
Twitter: @lisajewelluk
Facebook: Lisajewellofficial

If you liked this, try:

The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett 
When orphaned Mary Lennox comes to live at her uncle's great house on the Yorkshire Moors, she finds it full of secrets. The mansion has nearly one hundred rooms, and her uncle keeps himself locked up. And at night, she hears the sound of crying down one of the long corridors.
The gardens surrounding the large property are Mary's only escape. Then, Mary discovers a secret garden, surrounded by walls and locked with a missing key. One day, with the help of two unexpected companions, she discovers a way in. Is everything in the garden dead, or can Mary bring it back to life?


The Forgotten Garden by Kate Moss
The Forgotten Garden is a captivating, atmospheric and compulsively readable story of the past, secrets, family and memory.
Cassandra is lost, alone and grieving. Her much loved grandmother, Nell, has just died and Cassandra, her life already shaken by a tragic accident ten years ago, feels like she has lost everything dear to her. But an unexpected and mysterious bequest from Nell turns Cassandra’s life upside down and ends up challenging everything she thought she knew about herself and her family.
Inheriting a book of dark and intriguing fairytales written by Eliza Makepeace—the Victorian authoress who disappeared mysteriously in the early twentieth century—Cassandra takes her courage in both hands to follow in the footsteps of Nell on a quest to find out the truth about their history, their family and their past; little knowing that in the process, she will also discover a new life for herself.


The Cement Garden by Ian McEwan
In this tour de force of psychological unease - now a major motion picture starring Charlotte Gainsbourg and Sinead Cusack - McEwan excavates the ruins of childhood and uncovers things that most adults have spent a lifetime forgetting or denying. "Possesses the suspense and chilling impact of Lord of the Flies." Washington Post Book World.

The Constant Gardener by John LeCarre
The Constant Gardener is a magnificent exploration of the new world order by one of the most compelling and elegant storytellers of our time. The novel opens in northern Kenya with the gruesome murder of Tessa Quayle--young, beautiful, and dearly beloved to husband Justin. When Justin sets out on a personal odyssey to uncover the mystery of her death, what he finds could make him not only a suspect among his own colleagues, but a target for Tessa's killers as well. 
A master chronicler of the betrayals of ordinary people caught in political conflict, John le Carre portrays the dark side of unbridled capitalism as only he can. In The Constant Gardener he tells a compelling, complex story of a man elevated through tragedy as Justin Quayle--amateur gardener, aging widower, and ineffectual bureaucrat--discovers his own natural resources and the extraordinary courage of the woman he barely had time to love.


Cat's Eye by Margaret Atwood
"Cat's Eye" is the story of Elaine Risley, a controversial painter who returns to Toronto, the city of her youth, for a retrospective of her art. Engulfed by vivid images of the past, she reminisces about a trio of girls who initiated her into the fierce politics of childhood and its secret world of friendship, longing, and betrayal. Elaine must come to terms with her own identity as a daughter, a lover, and artist, and woman - but above all she must seek release from her haunting memories. Disturbing, hilarious, and compassionate, "Cat's Eye, " is a breathtaking novel of a woman grappling with the tangled knots of her life.

The Girls by Emma Cline 
Northern California, during the violent end of the 1960s. At the start of summer, a lonely and thoughtful teenager, Evie Boyd, sees a group of girls in the park, and is immediately caught by their freedom, their careless dress, their dangerous aura of abandon. Soon, Evie is in thrall to Suzanne, a mesmerizing older girl, and is drawn into the circle of a soon-to-be infamous cult and the man who is its charismatic leader. Hidden in the hills, their sprawling ranch is eerie and run down, but to Evie, it is exotic, thrilling, charged—a place where she feels desperate to be accepted. As she spends more time away from her mother and the rhythms of her daily life, and as her obsession with Suzanne intensifies, Evie does not realize she is coming closer and closer to unthinkable violence, and to that moment in a girl’s life when everything can go horribly wrong. 

Those We Left Behind by Stuart Neville 
DCI Serena Flanagan is forced to confront a disturbing case from her past: the murder conviction of a 12-year-old-boy who has just been released from prison
DCI Serena Flanagan hasn’t heard the boy’s name in years. 
Not since the blood on the wall and the body in the bedroom. 
Not since she listened as he confessed to brutally murdering his foster father. 
But now Ciaran Devine is out of prison and back in her life. And so is his brother, Thomas – the brother that Flanagan always suspected of hiding something.  
When Ciaran’s probation officer comes Flanagan with fresh fears about the Devines, the years of lies begin to unravel, setting a deadly chain of events in motion.


The Last Act of Love by Cathy Rentzenbrink
In the summer of 1990, Cathy's brother Matty was knocked down by a car on the way home from a night out. It was two weeks before his GCSE results, which turned out to be the best in his school. Sitting by his unconscious body in hospital, holding his hand and watching his heartbeat on the monitors, Cathy and her parents willed him to survive. They did not know then that there are many and various fates worse than death. 
This is the story of what happened to Cathy and her brother, and the unimaginable decision that she and her parents had to make eight years after the night that changed everything. It's a story for anyone who has ever watched someone suffer or lost someone they loved or lived through a painful time that left them forever changed. Told with boundless warmth and affection, The Last Act of Love by Cathy Rentzenbrink is a heartbreaking yet uplifting testament to a family's survival and the price we pay for love.

I Found You by Lisa Jewell
East Yorkshire: Single mum Alice Lake finds a man on the beach outside her house. He has no name, no jacket, no idea what he is doing there. Against her better judgement she invites him in to her home.

Surrey: Twenty-one-year-old Lily Monrose has only been married for three weeks. When her new husband fails to come home from work one night she is left stranded in a new country where she knows no one. Then the police tell her that her husband never existed.


The House We Grew Up In by Lisa Jewell 
Meet the Bird family. They live in a honey-colored house in a picture-perfect Cotswolds village, with rambling, unkempt gardens stretching beyond. Pragmatic Meg, dreamy Beth, and tow-headed twins Rory and Rhys all attend the village school and eat home-cooked meals together every night. Their father is a sweet gangly man named Colin, who still looks like a teenager with floppy hair and owlish, round-framed glasses. Their mother is a beautiful hippy named Lorelei, who exists entirely in the moment. And she makes every moment sparkle in her children's lives.
Then one Easter weekend, tragedy comes to call. The event is so devastating that, almost imperceptibly, it begins to tear the family apart. Years pass as the children become adults, find new relationships, and develop their own separate lives. Soon it seems as though they've never been a family at all. But then something happens that calls them back to the house they grew up in -- and to what really happened that Easter weekend so many years ago.
Told in gorgeous, insightful prose that delves deeply into the hearts and minds of its characters, The House We Grew Up In is the captivating story of one family's desire to restore long-forgotten peace and to unearth the many secrets hidden within the nooks and crannies of home.


And don't forget: 

Best Venue for this title:

  • a communal garden or just a garden
  • a cafe at a garden centre
  • a park 


Best Drink to accompany this title:

  • champagne 
  • Pims 
  • orange squash


Best Snack to accompany this title:

  • barbecue food 
  • crisps and dips 
  • a picnic-style buffet 
For more recommendations and reviews please follow me on Twitter @katherinesunde3 (bibliomaniacuk) 

#Review & #Guestpost -The Saturday Secret by Linda Huber






















Linda Huber is best known for her psychological thrillers, of which I am an enormous fan! "Ward Zero" was published at the end of 2016 and her other titles include "The Cold Cold Sea", "Chosen Child", "The Attic Room" and "The Paradise Trees". So I was intrigued when Linda approached me and asked if I would be interested in reading something completely different......

THE SATURDAY SECRET 

The Saturday Secret is a collection of 15 very short, feel good tales of love and family life. They are all stories that have been previously published in UK national magazines and they are appearing here together for the first time. I saved them until I wanted a quick break from whatever else I was doing or reading and they were the perfect tonic to go alongside a cup of tea or when you have those spare five minutes in between appointments or meetings. 

Unlike Huber's other books, these stories are very light, humorous, very feel good and very easy to read. They are full of happy endings and moments of coincidences that give you a wry smile. Like all Huber's other books, her writing is good and her story structure satisfying and rewarding.

If you are looking for something very gentle then this is perfect for you! And not only do the stories make you feel good, the profits are going to charity so this really is a feel good book in every sense of the phrase! 

All profits from ebook and paperback sales of this collection will be donated to charity.
The Saturday Secret and other stories: fifteen feel-good tales of love and family life by [Huber, Linda]

TODAY I AM ALSO LUCKY ENOUGH TO HAVE A GUEST POST FROM LINDA HUBER!! 

So without further a do, I shall hand you over to her! 

What’s in a Name?

I’ve said it before, but names just aren’t my thing. Despite doing my absolute and honest best to give my characters a good selection of names, I’ve still ended up with a Jenny in one book and a Jennifer in another. Not to mention Frank and Frankie – also in different books, thank goodness. And I very nearly had two Colins, too. And two Pauls – you’d think there was a shortage of names out there. After that, I started a list, and thought I was more or less on top of things as far as naming characters was concerned.

Then I abandoned my suspense novels for a while, and started to put The Saturday Secret together…
The first name problem here wasn’t anything to do with the characters – it was what to call the book itself. Finding a title for a collection of feel-good short stories was quite a different task to finding one for a psychological suspense novel. A quick search round the internet told me that other people seemed to call their collections either ‘Tea Break Tales’ or the like, or they used the title of one of the stories. I decided to go with the latter – but which story should I choose?

At this point I didn’t have a cover image either, so I went on a cover hunt in the romance section of my cover designer’s website. This made a refreshing change, as I’m usually to be found poking around in the horror section. Romance covers are much prettier… And lo and behold, there was a cover which – with a few tweaks – was an exact fit for one of my stories. And so The Saturday Secret was born.

The next task was to put my individual stories onto one word doc. This involved a lot of copy and pasting, and then I settled down to read through the entire document, checking for spelling mistakes etc.

It was at around story six that I found myself frowning. Davie… wasn’t there a Davie in an earlier story? Heck, yes, better change that. And then I found Brian and Bryan. And Phillip and Philip. And Marion and Marion. Cold sweat broke out as I scrolled up and down, changing names and trying to make sure I’d found all the variations like ‘Davie’s’ and ‘Davie’ll’. It took hours. I was sick of the sight of my feel-good short stories by the time I was finished, but we only had to correct two names at the pdf stage, and fortunately, my formatter is a very patient woman.

The final name problem was me. Should I stick with Linda Huber as my author name for this different genre? L.E. Huber? Or use my old short story-writing pen name, Rosalind Farr? In the end, I decided I’d changed enough names in this book. So I’m Linda Huber here too. It’s always simplest to tell the truth…

And after all that, name-finding for my next suspense novel is going to feel like a walk in the park!

Thanks Linda - that's such a fun post! Thanks so much for being on the blog today and sharing with us all your thoughts about names!  

Here's a glance at the some of the stories in The Saturday Secret: 

The Party Partners   Belinda and Phillip have fun at weddings, engagement parties and all sorts of celebrations. But anything more personal was out of the question – or was it? 

Family Matters   Gary shares Sharon’s dream of having children – but as far as he’s concerned, it’s something for the future.

Corinna’s Big Day   It was the most important day in baby Corinna’s life, but for Madge, it was one of the saddest…

Lucky for Some   You might say drawing number 13 in the cycle rally was bad luck. You might say falling off was bad luck, too. But Hilary knew better!

Patiently Waiting   Mike woke up after his operation and saw the girl of his dreams. The problem was the engagement ring she wore on a chain round her neck…

The Saturday Secret   What was she up to? The whole family wanted to know! But Gran wasn’t telling…

And many more…

LINDA HUBER 

Linda Huber

Linda grew up in Glasgow, Scotland, but went to work in Switzerland for a year aged twenty-two, and has lived there ever since. Her day jobs have included working as a physiotherapist in hospitals and schools for handicapped children, and teaching English in a medieval castle. Not to mention several years being a full-time mum to two boys and a rescue dog.

Linda’s writing career began in the nineties, and since then she’s had over fifty short stories and articles published, as well as five psychological suspense novels. Her books are set in places she knows well – Cornwall (childhood holidays), The Isle of Arran (teenage summers), Yorkshire (visiting family), as well as Bedford and Manchester (visiting friends).


After spending large chunks of the current decade moving house, she has now settled in a beautiful flat on the banks of Lake Constance in north-east Switzerland, where she’s working on another suspense novel.

Linda Huber has written over fifty short stories for magazines. She is also the author of psychological suspense novels Chosen ChildWard Zero, and others.

Find out more about Linda here:

Amazon UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Linda-Huber/e/B00CN7BB0Q/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1   
  

 And you can follow me on Twitter for more recommendations and reviews @katherinesunde3 (bibliomaniacuk) 

The Doll Funeral by Kate Hamer

The Doll Funeral

My name is Ruby. I live with Barbara and Mick. They're not my real parents, but they tell me what to do, and what to say. I'm supposed to say that the bruises on my arms and the black eye came from falling down the stairs.

But there are things I won't say. I won't tell them I'm going to hunt for my real parents. I don't say a word about Shadow, who sits on the stairs, or the Wasp Lady I saw on the way to bed.

I did tell Mick that I saw the woman in the buttercup dress, hanging upside down from her seat belt deep in the forest at the back of our house. I told him I saw death crawl out of her. He said he'd give me a medal for lying.

I wasn't lying. I'm a hunter for lost souls and I'm going to be with my real family. And I'm not going to let Mick stop me.


Thirteen year old Ruby narrates this novel and her voice is immediately captivating. Hamer's prose is quite simply stunning and her ability to recreate the voice of a fascinating yet troubled young girl goes beyond impressive.

Finding out that she is adopted does not disturb Ruby in the way one would conventionally expect; she is relieved. But this revelation also sets her off on a journey to find her parents and Hamer's ability to capture the balance of excitement, tragedy, poignancy and naivety is perfect. Her imagined meetings with her parents are a mixture of the bright optimism only a child can have, and yet also tug away at those of us old enough to fear for her possible disappointment.

"I stopped, wondering what would happen if my parents really did come. I'd imagined a procession of birthday cakes, for all the years they'd missed......the one with thirteen candles would be the most magnificent: gilded, topped with jewelled fruits in the glow of soft flame."

Hamer's writing is poetic. This novel is a blend of realism, fantasy, fairy tale and myth.

"That night I became a proper hunter. Of true family. Of the threads that ghosts leave behind. Of lost souls." 

As well as this implication of ghosts and other worldliness, is the character of "Shadow" who reminded me of Peter Pan- although he's much darker but I think the connotation is probably intentional. There are other subtle references to fairy tales and imagery that reminds the reader of tales that might have been written by the Grimm brothers. The chapter headings themselves also imply more mythical or magical concepts. But Ruby's life is far from a fairy tale; the violence and abuse she suffers is only bearable because of the lyrical, detached way Ruby herself 'floats' up and watches from above as if it is happening to someone else. And there seems to be something about the birthmark that covers her face too:

"As if it was meant, like a mask that had been made especially for me." 

There's just endless passages to admire for their literary brilliance.

"When Tom came to the house the mirror turned suddenly milky, spreading cloud to its centre like glaucoma. I'd never seem this before and it frightened me."

And my favourite:

"Sleep constantly eludes, though. It begins to feel like a distant country she'll never visit again." 

Ruby's story is quite overwhelming in a way. Although the writing is brilliant and beautiful, imaginative and amazing, it does perhaps make this quite an intense novel. Ruby's story is not a happy story either. So Hamer breaks up Ruby's narrative set in 1983 with the third person narrative of Anna in 1970. The two timelines complimenting each other and allowing the author more exploration of the key themes in the book.

To be honest, I did find myself getting a little bit lost between the dual story line at times but it is not difficult to differentiate between the two voices and it is not difficult to keep track of the plot so actually it wasn't a problem really. I think I was just being swept along with the mesmerising prose and dreamlike quality of some of the passages.

So, not a very long review from me simply because I don't want to spoil the experience of reading this for the first time for you and I don't want to do the passages a disservice by quoting them out of context.

If you enjoy a slow burner of a book which is character driven and beautifully written then this is the novel for you. I don't know what I was expecting - I don't think it was this, but it was a huge treat and a huge pleasure to read. It deserves to do exceptionally well and for Hamer's talent as a fresh, original and imaginative writer to be recognised.

"The Doll Funeral" is published by Faber and Faber on the 16th February 2017.

Kate Hamer

Kate Hamer grew up in the West Country and Wales. She studied art and worked for a number of years in television and radio. In 2011 she won the Rhys Davies Short Story Prize and her short stories have appeared in many collections. Her novel THE GIRL IN THE RED COAT was published in the UK by Faber & Faber, in the US by Melville House and has been translated into 17 different languages. It was shortlisted for The Costa First Novel Prize, the British Book Industry Awards Debut Fiction Book of the Year, The John Creasy (New Blood) Dagger and the Wales Book of the Year. It was a Sunday Times bestseller

Follow Kate Hammer on Twitter
kate_hamer
Or via her website
www.katehamer.co.uk

For more recommendations and reviews you can follow me on Twitter @katherinesunde3 (bibliomaniacuk)

#Review A Room Full of Killers by Michael Wood

A Room Full of Killers (DCI Matilda Darke, Book 3)

This is the third book in Michael Wood’s darkly compelling crime series featuring DCI Matilda Darke.

Eight killers. One house. And the almost perfect murder…

Feared by the people of Sheffield, Starling House is home to some of Britain’s deadliest teenagers, still too young for prison. Now the building’s latest arrival, Ryan Asher, has been found brutally murdered – stabbed twelve times, left in a pool of blood.

When DCI Matilda Darke and her team investigate, they uncover the secrets of a house tainted by evil. Kate Moloney, the prison’s manager, is falling apart, the security system has been sabotaged, and neither the staff nor the inmates can be trusted.

There’s only one person Matilda believes is innocent, and he’s facing prison for the rest of his life. With time running out, she must solve the unsolvable to save a young man from his fate. And find a murderer in a house full of killers…
 

Perfect for fans of Stuart MacBride, Mark Billingham and Val McDermid.

The prologue for this third instalment in what is fast becoming one of my "go to" detective series, opens with the most chilling and gruesome description worthy of any horror movie.

"It wasn't water pooling on the coffee table. It wasn't water dripping and splashing all over the cream carpet. It was blood. I looked up at the light; the surrounding ceiling was a mass of blood. It was dripping down, splattering against the glass, bouncing off and soaking the carpet."

I was hooked.

Repulsed. Shocked. But hooked.

It is was impossible not to read straight on - well, not impossible, I did have to double check all the doors and windows were locked first! But once I'd read Chapter One, I was well and truly 'in'! Wood's style of writing is immediately engaging and well paced. He quickly establishes an great premise for a crime novel and introduces us to his main character who is full of their own personal ghosts, grief and traumas. He reminds us of the protagonist's previous case history and the hurt, anguish and anger it has caused for all involved.

"Matilda, an advanced copy just for you. May it give you as many sleepless nights as it's given me."

Elly Griffiths says that DCI Matilda Darke is the perfect heroine and she is right. Darke presents herself as cold and hard hearted but she is not.

"The fact the body, in this instance, was that of a convicted killer made no difference. He was still someone's son."

She is hounded and haunted by her mistakes in the past - if you've followed the series from the beginning you will be familiar with the backstory of Matilda but Wood ably recaps and makes sure any reader is up to speed with what has come before without hindering our enjoyment or distracting us from this book. We continue to see how the effects of Darke's handling of the  Carl Meagan case still follow her everywhere and how hard she has to work to prove herself again -not only to her colleagues but also to herself. I think this is a really interesting aspect of the story and it was great to see Matilda -all the key characters- really developing as the series strides confidently into its third instalment.

Darke is careful, thoughtful, considered and intelligent. She is dedicated and the reader is always rooting for her. She is easy to relate to and empathise with.

"If we don't understand the message straightaway, there'll be another body."

There is no doubt that Matilda will solve this case. She will seek out any secret, however deeply buried and however disturbing and dark.

And watch out, this really is a novel of deeply disturbing crimes and it is very dark. "A Room Full of Killers" has a cast of not one but eight killers; all evoked with the same chilling, unnerving and spine tingling fright that will haunt you long after you close the last page. Personally, although I enjoyed the chapters from Matilda and the investigation, I really enjoyed the chapters from the boys who live at Starling House. They were utterly compelling.

"I had a whole year to plan my crime and choose my victims. It didn't take long to come up with my younger brother, Jason. I've never liked him."

The use of first person is so effective and a great contrast between the sections from the third person narrative which follows Matilda. Wood challenges himself by writing from several different of the boys' points of view, but each is different and individual. The sense of psychological terror is maintained throughout every single stage of the story.

And it is psychologically terrifying.

"I can't actually remember what happened next. One minute I was lying in bed, the next I was turning on the gas canisters for the stove. I didn't think of the consequences until afterwards but I'm not sorry. They were suffocating me."

This is a very readable, very gripping, very satisfying crime novel that does everything you want from any detective book. Wood raises some questions about nature and nurture, whether evil is inherent, if there is such thing as redemption as well as all the usual questions about good, bad, victim and villain. I think the focus on the behaviour of such young boys and organisation of the institution they are part of opens such an interesting discussion and allows Wood to explore some really challenging yet fascinating themes and ideas.

It's a good read. If you love crime, detectives, murder and a generous helping of violence, then this is the book for you! It works well as a stand alone but I would recommend that once you've read this one, you go back and start the series from the beginning. Wood is a clever writer and I have really enjoyed following his series. He deserves success with Matilda Darke and I'm certain he'll get it!

"A Room Full of Killers" is published on 17th February by Killer Reads.

Michael    Wood

You can follow Michael Wood on Twitter @MichaelHWood

Michael Wood is a freelance journalist and proofreader living in Sheffield. As a journalist he has covered many crime stories throughout Sheffield, gaining first-hand knowledge of police procedure. He also reviews books for CrimeSquad, a website dedicated to crime fiction.

For more recommendations and reviews, you can follow me on Twitter @katherinesunde3 (bibliomaniacuk)

Saturday, 11 February 2017

#BloggerRecognitionAward

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This is the first time my blog has ever been up for any kind of award so I am so very grateful to the lovely Mairead of Swirl and Thread for her nomination! There are so many fantastic bloggers out there it's an honour to be mentioned alongside you all! To be honest, I am a bit shocked but very flattered to be part of this award! It's a privilege to be part of such a supportive community and chat with such prolific readers and reviewers everyday!

Image result for images I love book bloggers

Thank you again Mairead! If you don't already follow Mairead on twitter @swirlandthread er then hello, get over there and get following!! She is an absolutely fab book reviewer and also a very generous supporter of all book bloggers. She is responsible for many additions to my out of control TBR pile and I love seeing what she is reading next! So I am indeed very flattered to have been nominated by Mairead today!

Before we go any further there are a few 'housekeeping' rules to acknowledge:

RULES OF THE AWARD:

1. Thank the blogger who nominated you and provide a link to their blog.
2. Write a post to show your award.
3. Give a brief story of how your blog started.
4. Give two pieces of advice to new bloggers.
5. Select 15 other bloggers you want to give this award to.
6. Comment on each blog and let them know you have nominated them and provide a link to the post you created.

And now, on with the award!

How did my blog start?

Last January, like everyone else, I was vaguely thinking about what personal goals I could set myself for 2016. I have always been a prolific reader and never been able to hide my passion for books so I decided to start a blog reviewing books then the next time a friend asked me for a recommendation I would have a record of what I had enjoyed. I was kind of treating it like an extension of Goodreads! I had never used blogger or Twitter before so it was a steep learning curve - and still is! Like so many other bloggers, I never for one moment thought people might actually read my posts or that it would lead to 'meeting' so many lovely fellow book bloggers and authors.

Two pieces of advice to bloggers:

1. Have a separate email account for your blog / twitter name. I have a separate account for Bibliomaniac and it has been invaluable in making sure these emails and notifications don't get swallowed up in my personal account. It also helps keep it separate in the way you keep your job separate from you private life. Oh, yeah, that leads me on to my next point....

2. Pace yourself. Blogging is a not-a-job-job! Does that make sense? Some blogs earn money but I think this is the exception not the rule, and as far as I know, Book Bloggers do not make money from it so I can't really call blogging my "job" even though it is! Obviously, it is up to me how often I blog, tweet, post on Facebook and accept review copies of new books, but I am a bibliomaniac and I am hopeless at managing my TBR pile. I spend a lot of time on my blog as I enjoy it so much but sometimes my real life demands my attention as well.......! So my advice would be to keep an eye on how many ARC's you request and how much time you spend on social media. I have finally got around to compiling a spreadsheet for the next 6 months so I can avoid getting overwhelmed with deadlines for publication day reviews. (No, it hasn't worked, I've totally ignored it because I just HAD to have THAT book!!)

I guess what I am trying to say is that it is easy to let the blog take over everything else which can then lead to a either a reading slump (a book lover's equivalent of writer's block! Deeply distressing!) or a kind of 'burnout' from too much interaction on social media - although one of the best places in the world, twitter / facebook can also induce a bit of anxiety, frustration, upset and extra pressure. It's all about that elusive 'balance'!!! Oh yes - your family and friends, they might sometimes want to see you without a book in front of your nose!

15 Bloggers to pass this award on to:

Hhmmmmm, this is the hardest question I have ever been asked.......Can I list them all?! I know some bloggers have already been nominated so I will try not to duplicate those I would have wanted to include......apologies if there are any repetitions!

cwtchupbooks
readandlivewell
LoudMouthMauraLynch
thebookwormsfantasy
bookishbeck
emmasbookishcorner
cosybooks.com
readbyjess
bookword
whatcathyreadnext
cleopatralovesbooks
bloominbrilliantbooks
lindasbookbag
portobellobookblog
ravencrimereads

Thanks also to Abbie @Bbrilliantbooks  who blogs at bloominbrilliantbooks.com - she has also nominated me for this award! Thanks ever so much Abbie - I love seeing what you are reading and reviewing and you are a terrific supporter of my blog for which I am really grateful!

Thanks again guys - I think there is only one thing left to say:
Image result for images i love book bloggers

Wednesday, 8 February 2017

#Giveaway #FireChild #SKTremayne

The Fire Child

For anyone who reads my blog and Twitter feed regularly, you will know that this was one of my top reads in 2016 and I really loved it. Today "The Fire Child" is out in paperback.

To celebrate the paperback publication of "The Fire Child" - a 5* read - I have TWO COPIES of the book to GIVEAWAY!!

Please enter the rafflecopter raffle below to be in with a chance of winning!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

SYNOPSIS

The chilling new psychological thriller by S. K. Tremayne, author of the Sunday Times No. 1 bestseller, THE ICE TWINS.

When Rachel marries dark, handsome David, everything seems to fall into place. Swept from single life in London to the beautiful Carnhallow House in Cornwall, she gains wealth, love, and an affectionate stepson, Jamie.

But then Jamie’s behaviour changes, and Rachel’s perfect life begins to unravel. He makes disturbing predictions, claiming to be haunted by the spectre of his late mother – David’s previous wife. Is this Jamie’s way of punishing Rachel, or is he far more traumatized than she thought?

As Rachel starts digging into the past, she begins to grow suspicious of her husband. Why is he so reluctant to discuss Jamie’s outbursts? And what exactly happened to cause his ex-wife’s untimely death, less than two years ago? As summer slips away and December looms, Rachel begins to fear there might be truth in Jamie’s words:

‘You will be dead by Christmas.’

MY REVIEW OF THE FIRE CHILD

I loved "The Ice Twins" and rated it 5/5 stars so when I saw that there was a new title from Tremayne I knew I had to read it! I was thrilled when my request for an advanced copy from NetGalley was approved!

This story is set in Cornwall and the setting is evoked as strongly and with as much atmosphere as Scotland was in her previous novel. Rachel Daly has left London, giving up a job and a "supposedly exciting life" to marry the handsome David; an older, richer widower with an 8 year old son, Jamie. She feels happy to have left London behind reflecting that she is "no longer hanging on to dear life anymore" and embraces her new start with her new husband, new son, new house which they share with her new mother in law Juliet. Rachel is excited by the prospect of continuing the renovation of the ancestral home with its 18 bedrooms, huge hall ways and drawing rooms- such a contrast from her own council estate upbringing. She also has a deeply buried past which she hopes to have truly left behind, making sure it is forever carefully hidden from David.

Rachel wants to "heal" David and Jamie who are both still in the grips of grief following the death of wife and mother Nina, who died in an accident 18 months ago in the Morvellon Mines which are owned by David's family and close to the house. Although Rachel is highly conscious that she is struggling to live in the shadow of the perfect Nina, she still sees it as her job "to rescue things" and repair this hurting family.

From the beginning Tremayne sows the seeds of suspense with the chilling description of West Cornwall as a land where "hard granite glistens after the rain, rivers run through words like deep secrets, terrible cliffs conceal exquisite caves where moorland valleys cradle wonderful houses." The landscape's rich history and captivating natural raw beauty are a perfect setting for a story full of ghostly shadows from the past. David's family have run the mines for centuries; a business which has made them wealthy and powerful but at the expense of the lives of many of their employees who were sent deep into the tunnels that run under the sea. From the drawing room, David's ancestors would sip their claret and "hear the picks of the miners working the tin that paid for the wine...crawling under the sea that sometimes broke through and poured into the tunnels .. the sea claiming them while (we) sat in Carnhallow eating canapés." Imagery is vivid and it reminded me of "Jamaica Inn", "Moonfleet", "Lorna Doone" and a very brooding version of "Poldark"!

The chapter headings count down the days before Christmas so the reader is already tense, sensing events will build towards a dramatic climax. They will not be disappointed! Tension increases as Rachel's new home, Carnhallow, though stunning, it "glares at (her) with disapproval" and she is never far from hearing the "brutal sea in the distance, kicking at the rocks beneath Morvellan...like an atrocity that will never stop." Rachel is also haunted by the shadow of Nina as her presence lingers in a way Rebecca haunted the narrator in the brilliant novel by Daphne Du Maurier. It is highly compelling.

Rachel is the prime narrator but we also hear from David and this adds a more complicated layer to the plot. There is a suggestion that Nina's death was not an accident. David reveals "only he knows the truth", a truth which torments him daily. Jamie also seems to have seen and heard things he shouldn't have on the night of Nina's accident and it seems everyone is keeping secrets about what actually happened. Although David is in love with Rachel and sees her as a refreshing contrast to Nina, admiring her as a survivor with opinions he never usually hears in his highly pressured, workaholic life as a talented QC, this affection and respect is not always obvious to Rachel. It is also questioned by the reader as Rachel's behaviour begins to change following Jamie's strange predictions about the future as he develops an unnerving conviction that he can still see Nina and Rachel overhears him to "talking" to her. Jamie makes frightening statements that threaten Rachel and claim she will be dead by Christmas. David becomes compromised and suspicious of her- disbelieving her claims about Jamie and trying to ignore her persistent search for answers. He thinks she is becoming rather unstable but she in turn becomes fearful of him, suspecting that he might have been involved in Nina's "accident" and is therefore capable of violence or even murder. Both begin to believe the other of committing murder, both see the other as dangerous and the reader is unsure who to trust and who to believe. Both narrators seem unreliable and this confuses the reader who has been led to form a fond affection for Rachel, identifying with her and rooting for her to succeed in "mending" her new family. All the way through I was kept guessing as to what had actually happened - there were so many possible explanations planted by Tremayne and several twists and revelations. Is Nina really dead? Has she come back? Is David seeing her? Did he kill her? Did Jamie? Did his mother, Juliet? How dangerous is David? How unstable is Rachel? As I said before, compelling stuff!

I liked the way the house still seemed to belong to Nina and it was impossible to escape her legacy. Rachel even imagines seeing her with them while she sleeps with David. Juliet tries to get her to wear some of Nina's clothes, observing that there is an uncanny likeness between them. As the novel progresses, Rachel seems to become more haunted. Tremayne then begins to mix the two stories - David's and Rachel's secret pasts, to create fantastic tension and mounting suspense. There is more confusion, repetition and subtle hints. The atmosphere becomes more foreboding and I honestly couldn't drag myself away from the pages! Tremayne's use of weather and location are deeply eerie and affecting. My fear was palpable and literally heart-stopping. I was truly gripped and truly scared.

This is the best ghost story I have read in a long time. Jamie's character is convincing and authentic and he helps to influence the reader of Rachel's reliability. He is a little like the boy in "Sixth Sense", as sensitive and as receptive to atmosphere and emotion but more exaggerated because of his grief and confusion. I was impressed with how Tremayne manipulated me to respond to David and how I was still trying to fit the puzzle together until the last minute. The plot is well controlled and skilfully managed.

And I was too scared to turn the light off when I eventually finished reading it late at night!

I highly recommend this book, especially if you are fans of the film "Sixth Sense" or books like Du Maurier's "Rebecca", Stephen King's"The Shining" and Sarah Water's "The Little Stranger."


THE FIRE CHILD is out in paperback on 9th February 2017 from Harper Collins.

Follow me on Twitter @katherinesunde3 for more book reviews and recommendations.