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Book Chat

Why You Should – Or Shouldn’t – Read a Book Set During Covid-19

15th March 2021 By Julianne Leave a Comment

This Sunday is the one-year anniversary of the day the story starts in Unlucky in Lockdown – my novella set during the first two weeks of the first Covid-19 lockdown in the UK.

To commemorate this, I thought I’d write a post featuring three reasons why you might not want to read a book set during the pandemic, like Unlucky in Lockdown, and three reasons why you might want to read it, or you should give it a go anyway!

Three reasons why you might not want to read a book set during the pandemic

You’re struggling to read at all right now

I have been there! Although overall I have read more during this time than ever before, there have been weeks and months where I’ve felt too exhausted, angry, or sad to read very much. And if that’s how you feel, that’s perfectly fine. Reading is a demanding activity for many people and we already have enough stress right now. If you’re getting your entertainment from TV, films, podcasts, or anything else right now, I completely understand.

Living through it is enough, you don’t want to think about it in your leisure time, you would rather read for escapism

Another totally legitimate point of view! I have definitely mostly been reading for escapism – I have written not one but two recent blog posts about escapist reads – Five Escapist Reads and The Best Escapist Books I Read in Previous Winters – check them out if you want some inspiration!

You don’t think it will be realistic, or represent your experience

Now, this one isn’t so cut and dry. Everyone’s experience is different, and no one writer is going to be able to capture the whole reality of the situation. But finding a writer who gets what you’re going through can be really amazing and help you feel less alone and understand your own mental state. You don’t have to find a perfect match first time – try different stories and books and see what feels right.

Three reasons why you should give it a go anyway

It can help you feel less alone

Reading about characters in a similar situation to ours is a great reminder that everyone else is living through this too, and that our feelings aren’t weird or wrong or incomprehensible. Other people out there get it. They know what we’re feeling. They’ve experienced what we’ve experienced, and felt the same emotions as they’ve lived through it.

It can help you process your feelings

I don’t know about you, but seeing someone else work through difficult feelings that I’m having, even in fiction, can give me the strength and the inspiration to own up to my emotions, reach out to others, and otherwise deal with the mess whirling around my brain.

It can cheer you up

Although Unlucky in Lockdown isn’t an escapist book and deals with the reality of the uncertainty that we’ve had to live with for the past few years, it certainly isn’t a pessimist one. Although I didn’t shy away from putting my characters in difficult situations, I think I managed to make it an ultimately optimistic story that shows how people, despite everything, have managed to find great reserves of strength and connect with each other. And I’m sure that other authors have similar intentions.

If you would like to read Unlucky in Lockdown, you can download it for free from:

Amazon | Google Play Books | Barnes & Noble | Apple Books | Rakuten Kobo | Scribd | Vivlio

Filed Under: Book Chat, Writing

Julianne Vs TBR Update and February 2021 Book Review Wrap Up: Going on a Digital Book Ban

9th March 2021 By Julianne Leave a Comment

In today’s video, I review my February reads and update you on my Julianne Vs TBR project, which is not going well…

Books mentioned and mini-reviews:

Jem and The Holograms: Dimensions

This is a collection of short comics by different writers and artists – it’s really cute and nice to see different takes on the art style. I definitely have a preference for Sophie Campbell’s art on Jem and The Holograms in the first two books, but it was still really cool to see a different range of artists   and their take on the same characters.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

A Perfect Paris Christmas by Mandy Baggot

This is the second Mandy Baggot book I’ve read and now I think I am a Mandy Baggot fan girl! I want to read all her back catalogue, I think she’s a really great romance writer. Her characters are so realistic, with full lives outside the romance. They have jobs that they care about and families they care about and it just makes them seem such wonderful 3D people!  A Perfect Paris Christmas is about a woman who goes to Paris just before Christmas to meet the mother of her kidney donor, and while she’s there, meets and starts to fall for her donor’s best friend, who is struggling to adjust to life without her. It’s just gorgeous.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

Romancing Mr Bridgerton by Julia Quinn

I had high hopes for this one as it’s many people’s favourite Bridgerton book but it just couldn’t compare to An Offer From a Gentleman in my opinion! It was still perfectly readable and compulsive reading, up until the marriage proposal, and then I found myself losing interest. Unfortunately I just wasn’t as invested in the story as I wanted to be.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

Rescue Me by Sarra Manning

This is an absolute delight, a funny, lovely romance about a man and a woman who co-adopt a dog. She definitely wants to adopt, he’s just hoping to volunteer – but they both fall in love with Blossom, a shy little Staffy who needs patience and care. As they rehabilitate Blossom and work out how to share her, they start to develop feelings for each other, but are those feelings compatible? Sarra just gets better and better with every book. It was a dream and I will definitely read it again.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

Violette Around the World , Vol. 1: My Head in the Clouds! by Teresa Radice and Stefano Turconi

This is a graphic novel about a girl who lives with a traveling circus. It’s quite cute and while in Paris she meets Toulouse Lautrec which is funny, but it was missing any spark that would have made me love it. I think if I had read this as a child, I would have loved the idea but not the execution.

Buy: Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

Conspiracy of Ravens by Leah Moore, John Reppion and Sally Jane Thompson

Another graphic novel, this one has beautiful art, but the story felt very rushed and I longed for it to be longer. It’s about a girl at a boarding school who inherits a locket and a mansion from an aunt that she didn’t know existed. Her parents  want her to sell it as quickly as possible, but then she starts having these  weird experiences with birds, developing magical powers. Eventually she finds out that she and a bunch of other  girls are the descendants of an all-woman secret organization. It’s a great premise, but I felt like I didn’t really get to know any of the characters, as there’s so much plot and too few pages to explore it!

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

The Lottery and Other Stories by Shirley Jackson

This is just as brilliant as you’ve heard – the stories are really varied,  some of them have a strong plot but most of them  are vignettes which make you think. I really liked that because that’s the kind of short story that I struggle with and these were such perfect examples.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

The Way Past Winter by Kiran Millwood Hargrave

This is a middle-grade fairy tale about a girl who sets out on a quest to save her brother from the Bear, a powerful being who controls the woods and the weather. It’s a lovely kids adventure and quite a quick audiobook – I wanted something short and seasonal and this was perfect!

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

Filed Under: Book Chat, Julianne Vs TBR, Reviews, YouTube

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