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You are here: Home / Archives for Book Chat

Book Chat

My Favourite Books Read in 2018

16th February 2019 By Julianne Leave a Comment

It’s time for me to share my favourite books read in 2018! This is a mix of new releases and backlist, in a variety of genres – my only criteria was ‘enjoyment’!

Tess of the Road, by Rachel Hartman

This book, you guys! I think about how wonderful this book was at least once a week. I never, ever love a book so much I want to start it again as soon as I finish but it took a lot of willpower not to hit play on this again and to move on to the rest of my TBR. Tess’ story is so beautifully told that I couldn’t help but fall in love with this difficult, troubled, young woman and her growing determination not to let her past keep her down. It’s got an awe-inspiring quiet power.

I filmed an entire video on this book, which you can watch below:

The best of the rest:

Seraphina, by Rachel Hartman

Before Tess of the Road, I read Seraphina and its sequel Shadow Scale, which I would highly recommend, as the ending of Shadow Scale is spoiled in Tess of the Road, and it’s better you get the benefit of the incredible world building right from where it all begins. Seraphina’s mother was a dragon, but no-one knows – relationships between humans and dragons are strictly prohibited. Her father would rather she live a quiet life to protect them both, but she can’t resist persuing her dream to becoming assistant music mistress at the royal court, where she develops suspicions that some dragons are plotting high treason.

Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, by Gail Honeyman

Half my friends seem to have fallen in love with this book this year. If I was to rate on audiobook narrator alone, this would be #1. As I said in my original review:

‘I heard so much buzz about this book and the hype was totally deserved. Heartwarming but not sickly, sad but not gloomy, Eleanor Oliphant is completely perfect, as the narrator, Cathleen McCarron, is for the book’

Someday, Someday, Maybe, by Lauren Graham

This book has really stayed with me for some reason, perhaps because I want to carry the narrator’s determination to make it as an actor around with me in my heart as I try to start a writing career. I listened to the audiobook, which is read by the author, and I really liked the tone her voice gave to the story. Content warning for lots of diet/weight-loss speak.

First Class Murder, Jolly Foul Play, Misteltoe and Murder, all by Robin Stevens

The continued adventures of teenage 1930s upper-class detectives Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong continue to be brilliant, as they deal with murder on the Orient Express, another murder at Deepdean, and a festive felling in Cambridge. I hope there are many, many more to come.

Unveiling Venus, by Sophia Bennett

‘This sequel to Following Ophelia was a nerve-wrenching adventure full of glamour, art, architecture, romance, betrayal, and entrepreneurship! I really really really really hope that many more people read these books, firstly because they are fab, and secondly because I want a third book in this series!’

Never Evers, by Tom Ellen and Lucy Ivison

I think I said it best the first time around:

‘This was a delight! I’m very fussy about books for younger teens – I think it’s so difficult to get the voice right and some writers miss the mark but Tom and Lucy got it spot on. The book follows a group of boys and a group of girls on a ski/snowboarding trip. They find themselves staying in the same hotel and of course bets are made, crushes develop, and much hilarity follows.’

The Darkest Part of the Forest, by Holly Black

Holly Black is one of those writers who just keeps getting better and better. Ben and Hazel have always known that their town exists alongside the faerie world, but now old bargains are having new consequences, and the beautiful sleeping prince is missing…

The Dark Days Pact, by Allison Goodman

When I read this, I really enjoyed it, but it’s the way this book has stayed with me that catapulted it into this list. It’s the second in the Lady Helen series, a Regency-set tale of demon hunting and extreme romantic tension and in this book, Lady Helen has accepted her role as a demon hunter but is struggling to reconcile her abilities and responsibilities with the restrictions placed on women in her society.

Embroideries, by Marjane Satrapi

This is the shortest book on this list, being a graphic memoir, but it was really interesting and not something you see very often – different women in the author’s family recounting stories from their love lives.

Educated, by Tara Westover

This is one of those books that’s lived in my head ever since I finished it. It’s shocking, thoughtful, and incredibly well put together. As I put it in my original review, it’s a ‘powerful pacy memoir about the author’s childhood as a Mormon survivalist and her decision to pursue education despite her father’s disapproval and the abuse she suffered at the hands of her brother’.

The Last Namsara, by Kristen Ciccarelli

Magic, mythology, political intrigue and dragons…if I hadn’t been reading Rachel Hartman this year then this would probably have been my favourite fantasy series that I began reading in 2018. Alas, it was pipped to the post but it’s still a fantastic read that I devoured in almost a single day.

The WORN Archive: A Fashion Journal about the Art, Ideas, and History of What We Wear, edited by Serah-Marie McMahon

A collection of pieces from a Canadian fashion journal? How could I not love it? This is a colourful, varied, anthology and well worth checking out if you enjoy thinking about clothes.

The Rise and Fall of Becky Sharp, by Sarra Manning

This book is best described in a single word: delicious. Sarra’s contemporary Becky is as sharp as her name and her scheming adventures are irresistible. I must read Vanity Fair so I can fully compare it, but I watched the TV adaptation and I loved seeing how the characters and settings were updated. And it’s always nice to see Tories and media barons get the slagging off they deserve.

Giant Days (so far), by John Allison, with art by Max Sarin and Lissa Treiman

If you haven’t read this charming, realistic-yet-surreal serial about three young women at university in Sheffield, you really should give it a try. I can’t imagine why anyone wouldn’t like it. It’s fast, easy to follow, and emotionally involving.

Pure Juliet, by Stella Gibbons

You know when a book makes you desperately want to binge read everything by that author? This did that to me. Pure Juliet is a funny, warm, flawed gem of a book that made me want to read everything Stella Gibbons actually finished during her lifetime! The fact that I can’t just abandon all my responsibilities to hide in a cottage somewhere and read her entire catalogue is extremely frustrating.

Have you read any of these books? What did you think? I’d love to know.

Filed Under: Book Chat, Recommendation Lists, Reviews, YouTube

Favourite Couples in Books

12th February 2019 By Julianne 1 Comment

Way back in the day, I did a ‘Top Ten Favourite Romances‘, and I would stand by the recommendations in that post. But reading it again led me to take a different direction with this post. These are favourite couples, and although most of them are all successful romances, some of them do not have the healthiest, most long-lasting relationships, but they’re favourite couples for what the characters learn about themselves and the world!

Adult Favourite Couples

1. Nicholas and Julia in The River of No Return by Bee Ridgway

This is a romantic adventure with a lot of time travel and thanks to that it takes a long time for these two long-separated would-be lovers to be reunited, but once they do it feels so right and I loved seeing them together, even as the world hovers on the brink of possible destruction. What’s also interesting is that Nicholas has lived in present-day America, so when he returns to Regency England, he brings modern mores back with him!

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

2, Celia and Marco in The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

Another romantic adventure set in the glittering, fantastic world of the Night Circus, this is a slow burn as rivals turn to lovers, and the inevitability of their developing feelings, and the impending doom, becomes clear.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

3. Tiffy and Leon in The Flatshare by Beth O’Leary

This is a romance, so of course they’re a great couple, but what I particularly liked about flatsharers Tiffy and Leon was how supportive they are of each other throughout. This makes their romance have a depth and realism that not every love story has.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

4. Barry and Morris (and Carmel) in Mr Loverman by Bernardine Evaristo

Antiguan gentleman Barry has been secretly having an affair with his best friend Morris for decades, and finally Morris has given him an ultimatium. This book charts the history and future of their relationship, but also the life of Barry’s wife, Carmel, whose fortune has been just as intertwined. Seeing them both make changes after so many years together was fascinating and life-affirming!

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

5. Margot and Will (and Blossom) in Rescue Me by Sarra Manning

Woman meets dog meets man, and there is so much to work out to get it right. It takes a long, long time for Margot and Will to admit they want to be in a proper relationship with each other, not just co-pawrents of a needy Staffie. They have to work through so much past trauma and be brave enough to be together, and it is so powerful.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

6. Abigail and Miles in Black Sheep by Georgette Heyer

This is my favorite of Georgette Heyer’s Regency romances that I’ve read so far. Although Miss Wendover and Mr Calverleigh act like a bickering couple from the very start, it takes so long for their feelings to be confessed, and in the meantime, they have another relationship to disrupt – if Miles will only agree! The dynamic is just wonderful.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

7. Mattie and Tom in A Winter Kiss on Rochester Mews by Annie Darling

Although the entire ‘Little Bookshop of Lonely Hearts’ series is fab, Mattie and Tom were my favourite couple, going from enemies to friends back to enemies and finally to lovers. They’re the only couple in the series who have a history before the book starts, and this means that it’s all the more intriguing how little they know each other and how far they have to go.

Buy: Amazon (affiliate link)

YA Favourite Couples

1. Lexi and Aidan in Unconventional by Maggie Harcourt

Starting off with a properly cute, romantic couple! In Unconventional, set at a series of conventions run by Lexi and her father, she meets Aidan, a new author. They have several awkward further meetings, and eventually that awkwardness turns into LURVE. As it should.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

2. Tuesday and Jackson Griffith in My Secret Rockstar Boyfriend by Eleanor Wood

Tuesday, a blogger, is invited into the world of troubled rockstar Jackson Griffith, but it’s not as glamorous and romantic as she expected…this is a case of a relationship teaching both characters a lesson!

Buy: Amazon (affiliate link)

3. Nina and Jamie in Love Song by Sophia Bennett

Another properly romantic one – this was my second favourite book read in 2016. The story of Nina, an aspiring photographer who gets the opportunity to go on tour with the hottest boyband in the world, was unputdownable. The romance is a slow-burn, like all the best, and I could honestly drop everything and read it again right now.

Buy: Amazon (affiliate link)

4. Steffi and Rhys in A Quiet Kind of Thunder by Sara Barnard

This is the cutest book I have ever read for a book club, honestly, although it covers a lot of serious stuff, the central couple themselves are sweetness personified. We found it unanimously adorable as well as really informative about selective mutism and deafness.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

5. Sam and Hannah in Lobsters by Tom Ellen and Lucy Ivison

This book is hilarious and delightful and pretty much everything goes wrong on the path to love, which makes it even more joyously funny.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

6. Mary/Persephone and Felix in Following Ophelia by Sophia Bennett

Clever but naive Mary, who becomes a pre-Raphaelite muse in order to escape the tedious life of a servant, but discovers that the artists are largely broke, selfish self-promoters, and have no idea what it’s like for girls. Will Felix come through in the end and redeem himself? I’ll leave that to you to find out.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

7. Starr and Chris from The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas

As anyone who’s read this will know, Starr is an extremely awesome young woman, and Chris doesn’t stand in the way of that, though he has to learn some (often very funny) lessons along the way.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

8. Susan and McGraw from Giant Days by John Allison et al

One of the most entertainingly antagonistic couples in fiction, they’re determined to hate each other at the start of this series set at Sheffield University, but happily it doesn’t last, though the antagonism lives on!

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

9. Jo and Jake in Split by a Kiss by Luisa Plaja

Okay, I’ll be upfront in this one. Jo is kissed by Jake and splits into two versions of herself in separate timelines, one who pushes him away and another who becomes his girlfriend. Things don’t go smoothly for either version of Jo, and Jake is not a good boyfriend – but their relationship teaches her an important lesson.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

11. Beth and Alice in The Space Between by Meg Grehan

This is a slow-burn, but not all that slow as it’s a novel in verse! This beautiful story is about Beth, who has locked herself away from the world to try to get better. Her mental health gets worse and she can’t even leave the house when she first meets Alice. But Alice is willing to come in. It’s a story about patience and care and gentle, understanding love.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

12. Camille and Ada in Dangerous Remedy by Kat Dunn

Camille and Ada are professional rebels living shortly after the French Revolution. Camille is the leader of their gang, orphaned, headstrong, determined to leave no-one behind. Ada is her bookish, scientist girlfriend, who has mixed feelings about her own family and Camille’s choices. They both struggle with their roles in the group, what they mean to each other, and the life and death risks they keep on taking. It’s a fascinating relationship, and I enjoyed how it developed in Monstrous Design, the second in the trilogy.

Buy: Amazon | Bookshop.org (affiliate links)

And that’s it for now! I’ve tried to focus on UKYA in this list, but a couple of other things have snuck in. Have you read any of these books? Would they make it onto your list?

Filed Under: Book Chat, Recommendation Lists

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Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

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