Monthly Archives: January 2014

Review – The Memory Book by Rowan Coleman

By | January 27, 2014

The name of your first-born. The face of your lover. Your age. Your address… What would happen if your memory of these began to fade? Is it possible to rebuild your life? Raise a family? Fall in love again? When Claire starts to write her Memory Book, she already knows that this scrapbook of mementoes will… Read More »

Review – The Flavours of Love by Dorothy Koomson

By | January 27, 2014

‘I’m looking for that perfect blend of flavours; the taste that used to be you. If I find it, I know you’ll come back to me.’ It’s been 18 months since my husband was murdered and I’ve decided to finish writing The Flavours of Love, the cookbook he started before he died. Everyone thinks I’m coping… Read More »

Review – The Lie by Helen Dunmore

By | January 27, 2014

Cornwall, 1920, early spring. A young man stands on a headland, looking out to sea. He is back from the war, homeless and without family. Behind him lie the mud, barbed-wire entanglements and terror of the trenches. Behind him is also the most intense relationship of his life. Daniel has survived, but the horror and… Read More »

Review – Survivor by Lesley Pearse

By | January 20, 2014

It must be ten years since I last read a book by Lesley Pearse.  I can remember devouring her early books, hot off the press, and I’m not entirely sure why I left her behind. I think it had a lot to do with falling out with large, heavy books – heavy in the handling… Read More »

Review – The Midnight Rose by Lucinda Riley

By | January 12, 2014

Spanning four generations, The Midnight Rosesweeps from the glittering palaces of the great maharajas of India to the majestic stately homes of England, following the extraordinary life of a girl, Anahita Chavan, from 1911 to the present day . . . In the heyday of the British Raj, eleven-year-old Anahita, from a noble but impoverished… Read More »

Review – Spilt Milk by Amanda Hodgkinson

By | January 11, 2014

1913. Unmarried sisters Nellie and Vivian Marsh live an impoverished existence in a tiny cottage on the banks of the Little River in Suffolk. Their life is quiet and predictable, until a sudden flood throws up a strange fish on their doorstep and a travelling man who will change them forever. 1939. Eighteen-year-old Birdie Farr… Read More »

Review – The Boy That Never Was by Karen Perry

By | January 6, 2014

You were loved and lost – then you came back . . . Five years ago, three-year-old Dillon disappeared. For his father Harry – who left him alone for ten crucial minutes – it was an unforgivable lapse. Yet Dillon’s mother Robyn has never blamed her husband: her own secret guilt is burden enough. Now… Read More »

Review – The Other Typist by Suzanne Rindell

By | January 6, 2014

New York City, 1924: the height of Prohibition and the whole city swims in bathtub gin. Rose Baker is an orphaned young woman working for her bread as a typist in a police precinct on the lower East Side. Every day Rose transcribes the confessions of the gangsters and murderers that pass through the precinct.… Read More »

One to look forward to – Eeny Meeny by M J Arlidge

By | January 4, 2014

Two hostages. One bullet. A killer decision. Would you sacrifice yourself for another? A deranged criminal abducts couples – the victims wake up disorientated and desperate, they’re trapped with no one to hear their screams. They shout and plead, they scramble around, and that’s when they find the gun loaded with one bullet and with it… Read More »

Author feature (with giveaway) – The Emergence of Judy Taylor by Angela Jackson

By | January 3, 2014

New Year – the perfect time to be writing a review of Angela Jackson’s debut novel The Emergence of Judy Taylor, while my head’s still full of changes and fresh starts and opportunities to be taken.   The paperback edition was published by Canvas (Constable and Robinson) on 21 November 2013, and the book came highly recommended by… Read More »