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You are here: Home / Archives for Reviews

Reviews

February 2020 Book Review Wrap-Up: Three Historical Coming-of-Age Stories and Much More

28th April 2020 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Books mentioned and mini-reviews:

Toffee by Sarah Crossan

This is a beautiful verse novel about a runaway girl who finds a strange new home with a woman convinced that she is someone called Toffee. It explores tough topics slowly and carefully and I really enjoyed it.

Buy: Amazon | Hive (affiliate links)

Bristol Short Story Prize Anthology 11

This was the most recent Bristol Short Story Prize Anthology when I bought a copy last year for research into short story competitions and I really liked it. My favourite story was actually the last story – If, Say by Julianne Woodside – but I enjoyed all the others. Reading this inspired me to set myself a challenge to read one short story every day in February, which I’ve continued in subsequent months, so expect to see a lot more reviews of short story collections and anthologies this year.

Buy: Amazon | Hive (affiliate links)

City of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert

I adored this. I cannot overstate how much of a delight this was to listen to! It begins in the interwar period and follows a young woman, who after being kicked out of university, gets sent to live with her aunt who owns a theatre in New York. Her life quickly becomes decadently irresponsible as she makes friends, takes lovers and tries to figure out what kind of person she will be. It just ticked so many of my boxes! Theatres, people messing up their lives, female friendship, the process of working out you are and want to become – it was an addictive, sparkling dream of a book and I’m really hoping it stands up to a second listen.

Buy: Amazon | Hive (affiliate links)

Eric by Terry Pratchett

Eric is a demonology hacker but not a very good one – he accidentally summons Rincewind instead of a demon! This is a very short novel in the Discworld series and ultimately quite forgettable, though I enjoyed it.

Buy: Amazon | Hive (affiliate links)

Haven’t Stopped Dancing Yet by Shyama Perera

Another historical coming-of-age novel (this was a strong month for these!) this time beginning in London in the 1960s with the story of four girls as they go to secondary school, grow up, and get their first jobs and lovers. This one also ticked a few of my boxes, in this case for ‘recent historical London’ and ‘deals with issues of race and class’, and I really liked it. I’m really curious to find out what else this author has written.

Buy: Amazon (affiliate link)

Before the Devil Breaks You by Libba Bray

There’s not a lot I can say about this because it is the third in The Diviners series, but I’m still in love with the way these books are written and the ending – OMG!

Buy: Amazon | Hive (affiliate links)

The Beginning of the World in the Middle of the Night by Jen Campbell

I was given this at a Lush book club event which was really exciting because I’ve been a big fan of Jen’s YouTube channel for years and have read some of her stories in other publications. I was not disappointed in the least. It’s a gorgeous book full of thoughtful high concept stories and I will definitely read it again and again.

Buy: Amazon | Hive (affiliate links)

The Other Bennet Sister by Janice Hadlow (review copy from NetGalley)

This is a book which asks us to reconsider Mary Bennet, the most neglected of Austen’s Bennet sisters, exploring her character in much more detail than she gets in Pride and Prejudice. She’s awkward, has no natural charm, and is often criticised by her mother and ignored by her sisters. Yet her determination to figure out the world and what it expects from her makes her a very compelling protagonist and I couldn’t put this book down until the last seventy or so pages. At that point I still enjoyed it but it didn’t flow as lightly as the earlier chapters did.

Buy: Amazon | Hive (affiliate links)

Filed Under: Book Chat, Reviews, YouTube

January 2020 Book Review Wrap-Up: There Are Twelve Days, Okay?

24th April 2020 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Books mentioned and mini reviews:

Christmas Under a Cranberry Sky by Holly Martin

I want to go on holiday to this book. Desperately. It’s about a hotel reviewer who before a long-awaited sabbatical makes one last trip to a beautiful, Christmas themed resort, only to discover that the owner is the childhood sweetheart she ran out on years earlier. It was full of pretty much everything I love about Christmas and was such a perfect festive read I’m planning to re-read it and pick up the sequel to review next year!

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

House of Trelawney by Hannah Rothschild (review copy from NetGalley)

Trelawney Castle is a beloved millstone round the neck of its owners, inhabitants, and former residents, the three generations of the impoverished aristocratic Trelawney family. I really enjoyed this satirical look at a family clinging too hard to the past and those desperate to snatch it away from them.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

The Testaments by Margaret Atwood

Sigh…I enjoyed this, it was very gripping, but the way it came together reminded me far too much of a second-rate YA thriller. I liked finding out about the way the aunts’ organisation worked but I was really hoping this book would explore the lives of Marthas and Econowives too,.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Guards! Guards! by Terry Pratchett

This is the first novel in the Discworld series about the Ankh-Morpork City Watch so I was really excited to read it and wasn’t disappointed at all. It’s a lot of fun and there are dragons!

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

The Sunlight Pilgrims by Jenni Fagan

I read this for my work book club. It’s a strangely gentle apocalyptic novel about the inhabitants of a caravan park on a Scottish island as an ice age arrives. Dylan thought he would sell the caravan, the only inheritance his mother and grandmother, former proprietors of a London cinema, left him. But then he finds himself drawn into the lives of Constance and her twelve year old daughter Estella. It was really great to see an apocalypse story that isn’t a thriller and doesn’t focus on people with a lot of privilege – the people in this story were already struggling.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

A Season in the Snow by Isla Gordon (review copy from NetGalley)

I was expecting a cosy Christmassy romance and I feel slightly mis-sold because the beginning of this book is emotionally devastating! My heart ached for protagonist Alice, who after a terrible loss becomes a hermit in her London flat, avoiding the outside world and anyone except for her dog. She goes to stay in a friend’s Swiss chalet to try to come to terms with what’s happened, and it is cosy and lovely but also very realistic and depicts Alice’s slow recovery very well.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Filed Under: Book Chat, Reviews, YouTube

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