Wednesday, 11 April 2018

Blog Tour Extract: The Room by the Lake by Emma Dibdin


The Room by the Lake by Emma Dibdin
Published: 5th April 2018 (Paperback)
Publisher: Head of Zeus
Pages: 320
Available in Hardback, Paperback and on Kindle

Blurb
Caitlin never meant to stay so long. But it's strange how this place warps time. Out here, in the middle of nowhere, it's easy to forget about the world outside.
It all happened so fast. She was lonely, broke, about to give up. Then she met Jake and he took her to his 'family': a close-knit community living by the lake. Each day she says she'll leave but each night she's back around their campfire. Staring into the flames. Reciting in chorus that she is nothing without them.
But something inside her won't let go. A whisper that knows this isn't right. Knows there is danger lurking in that quiet room down by the lake...




Today for my stop on The Room by the Lake blog tour I have an extract from the first and second chapters of the book, enjoy x



Extract
New York, new start, yes, but why New York? On the tube to Heathrow I’d had a romantic notion of looking up at the departures board and picking a place at random, but this was the only destination I ever really had in mind. I’ve never been here before. No one in my family has been here before, as far as I know. My concept of New York is a charismatic jigsaw made up from fragments of pop culture and my own imagination. I could have gone to Paris or Florence or Berlin, where the language barrier would at least have given me an excuse to isolate myself. I could have gone to Budapest, where my mum spent what she always called the best three years of her life. I could have run anywhere in Europe, except that none of it was far away enough.
There’s rage in the streets here, a general thrum of aggression powering the city through its never-sleeping existence. Earlier I saw a cab drive straight through a red light, side-swiping a cyclist who smashed his palm hard against the driver’s side window, hitting the car again as it drove on past him, screaming ‘Are you fucking serious?’ Nobody around me gave the scene a second look. I assume I’ll get used to sights like this, just as the constant car horns have become like white noise.
The roads and pavements are all wide, the grid system laid out in vast, greedy swathes of right angles, and I’m reminded of colouring books and how I never, ever went outside the lines. How I cried after Natalie Bickers elbowed me while I was colouring in a tree once, my crayon zigzagging into the white and ruining the picture. I’ve been dreaming of kindergarten a lot this week.
Coming to New York for a new start on a visa waiver might be the stupidest, because I know perfectly well that I can’t get a job here, can’t even stay for more than three months. When the border official at JFK asked how long I planned to stay in the US, I told him my flight home leaves on 10th August, a flight I booked with no intention of taking. For once in my life, I’m refusing to think things through too much.
‘You’ve had a tough couple of years,’ the university counsellor told me, a box of tissues placed pointedly on the table between us. I should be crying, the subtext says. The fact that I’m not is suspect, maybe monstrous.
‘Sure.’ I’d promised myself I wouldn’t be snappy, not with this one, but it was better than the alternative of not speaking at all. ‘Could be worse.’
‘The death of a parent is one of the most profound losses a person can suffer. At your age, all the more so.’
‘High up on the stressful life event scale, yeah. Can I ask something?’
‘Of course, Caitlin.’
‘What would you say to someone who’s not only mourning the death of a parent, but sort of mourning the fact that the wrong parent died?’
She didn’t flinch, but I liked to think I blindsided her at least for a second. I knew I should feel disloyal to my dad, and horrified by the idea of my mum looking down from wherever and hearing me say it, but all I felt in that moment was satisfaction, like I’d finally grasped something I hadn’t dared to reach for before.
It’s the same satisfaction I feel now at the thought that maybe, just maybe, my dad will have sobered up for long enough to wonder where I am. Maybe even tried to call. What happens when you call a phone that has been thrown into the canal? Does it go straight to voicemail? Can the network tell when a SIM card is waterlogged?
I’d left a voicemail with my aunt Chloe and another with my best friend Sophie: clipped, utilitarian messages designed solely as insurance. I’m fine, I’m going away, don’t try to contact me and don’t report me as missing. I don’t want to give him a reason to turn this into a police procedural.
I just want to stay. In this lonely five days in New York I’ve been as low and high as I ever have, miserable and exhilarated, drunk on freedom and fear and the city’s collective, propulsive desire for more. In these streets where anger hums in the air, where cars keep driving straight towards you as you cross on a corner, where there’s no real expectation that you’re safe. Here, I can imagine dying, or else living forever.


CHAPTER TWO
As soon as I walk into the house that Friday night, my last night in London, I know I should leave.
I’ll never know exactly what it was about the hallway – the piles of post on the sideboard, neglected for months, the jumble of boots and trainers by the door making a mockery of the shoe rack, the way mundane objects felt overgrown – that gave me pause. Nausea in the pit of my stomach, buried like a bullet. The faint sound of opera reaches me, muffled by walls and a door ajar, and I lean hard against the front door as it closes behind me.
‘Hello? Dad?’
He’s sitting in his armchair, The New Grove Dictionary of Opera open on his lap, and he looks so familiar and comforting and appropriate that something young in me wants to run to him. Curl up at his side and let him read to me about a favourite aria or a composer’s biography, not because I have any interest in opera but because he does, and because I will remember this moment as something true. The knot in my stomach dares to loosen, until I see the glass. Stashed clumsily behind the leg of the side table, empty, because he drained it in a hurry.
We’d had a real afternoon together earlier in the week, a walk around Hampstead Heath, starting at the south-west entrance and skirting the edge of Parliament Hill, passing the ponds as the ground sloped gently upwards.
‘I really feel different about it this time, darling,’ he’d said to me as we passed the model boating pond, heading up towards Hampstead Gate and the dense, soothing forestry beyond. ‘When I think about drinking now, it just feels like some kind of nightmare. What the hell was I thinking, you know?’
I held onto these words like salt and threw them hard over my shoulder, and dared not to worry about him for an entire day afterwards.
Back in the living room, my voice is high and thin as I ask, ‘What are you drinking?’
‘Nothing.’
Almost worse than the lying itself is how bad he is at it. I need to brace for a fight but I’m just too tired, the weight of nausea in my stomach anchoring me in place. I want to join him in his denial, but I can’t do that either, not this time.
‘What are you drinking?’
‘I just said, darling, nothing.’
‘Yes you are. Dad, I can see the glass, okay?’
He looks slowly down at it, back at me, and I can see the lie failing to form, the wheels turning so slowly. It had made him so dull, the drinking, his once-sharp mind blunted.
‘You’re not fooling anyone.’
‘How dare you?’ he snaps, and suddenly he’s not slow any more. A live wire has been sparked and his eyes are wild, and he’s so far away from me now.
‘Dad—’
‘You don’t speak to me that way,’ he says. ‘You’ve always been disrespectful. I didn’t realize it for so long, but with everything happening with your mother, I just saw what I wanted to in you.’
It shouldn’t sting any more, this whiplash shift. My nails are pressing hard into my palms.
‘I’m stating facts, Dad.’
‘Stating facts? Well, yeah, you’ve always been good at that, good brain. Pity about your spine.’
‘What’s that even supposed to mean?’
‘Don’t pretend you don’t know, you little creep.’
I mentally recite the Google results I had spent whole evenings poring over, trying to remember all of the statistics about relapse and withdrawal. All that comes back to me are the facts about long-term liver damage, the early symptoms of cirrhosis, and how death has been hanging over this house for such a long time.
‘You know what the doctor told you,’ I manage, my throat closing up. He stares at me, eyes less wild now than cold, all affect gone.
I’m halfway up the stairs before I know what I’m doing, and in my room I throw clothes into my battered suitcase, grabbing toiletries with a rat-a-tat list of essentials ringing in my head. Toothbrush. Razor. Passport. Leave. Leave. Leave.
I look around the room and don’t feel anything, not even as I look at the childhood teddy bears I used to love so much. All I want is out, and I have just enough resolve left to get me there. As I’m locking my case with steady hands I think I hear him in the doorway and turn, fists tight again. But he’s passed my door, going to his study, a room that has not earned its name in months.
And a minute later, I’m back out in the night air, gasping because I’ve been holding my breath for minutes on end, or maybe that house is just airless. And when I reach the canal almost an hour later, I throw my phone in with such force I think my body may follow.

I really enjoyed reading The Room by the Lake by Emma Dibdin, you can check the review I wrote last year here.


Tuesday, 10 April 2018

Blog Tour Review: The Cornershop in Cockleberry Bay by Nicola May


The Corner Shop in Cockleberry Bay
Published: 9th April 2018
Pages: 403
Available on Kindle
Rating: 5/5

Blurb
Rosa Larkin is down on her luck in London, so when she inherits a near-derelict corner shop in a quaint Devon village, her first thought is to sell it for cash and sort out her life. But nothing is straightforward about this legacy. While the identity of her benefactor remains a mystery, he - or she - has left one important legal proviso: that the shop cannot be sold, only passed on to somebody who really deserves it.

Rosa makes up her mind to give it a go: to put everything she has into getting the shop up and running again in the small seaside community of Cockleberry Bay. But can she do it all on her own? And if not, who will help her succeed - and who among the following will work secretly to see her fail?

There is a handsome rugby player, a sexy plumber, a charlatan reporter and a selection of meddling locals. Add in a hit and run incident and the disappearance of a valuable engraved necklace – and what you get is a journey of self-discovery and unpredictable events.

With surprising and heartfelt results, Rosa, accompanied at all times by her little sausage dog Hot, will slowly unravel the shadowy secrets of the inheritance, and also bring her own, long-hidden heritage into the light.

Review
The Corner Shop in Cockleberry Bay is my first read by Nicola May but my goodness it won’t be my last, this book had all the elements of a fantastic read with some extra surprising extra elements. It’s one of my favourite books of this year so far.
Rosa Larkin has never had much luck being an orphan and moving from job to job have been her life for the past few years, but things are about to change. Rosa has a mystery benefactor and has now become the proud owner of the corner shop in Cockleberry Bay in a quaint little village in Devon. With nothing keeping her in London Rosa heads off for a new life by the sea with cute companion Hot the dog.
As Rosa sets out to make a success out of her little shop she comes across many of the residents. Some welcome her with open arms and some use underhand methods to try and see her fail and some Rosa just can’t help being drawn to. Life in Cockleberry Bay comes with plenty of its own drama including a hit and run accident, a necklace going missing and an unforgettable New Year’s Eve celebration, among all this Rosa beings to feel home and finds that the mystery behind the shop’s previous owner may just be the key to her own heritage.
I loved Rosa as a character, she’s had plenty of disappointment in her life but always picks herself back up and carries on with a smile on her face. Even when some of the locals don’t play fair she still manages to not to give in.  As the sparks of chemistry fly with various men and Rosa has her first tastes of romance I was pleased for her, I jus had my fingers crossed she pick the best one eventually.
The mystery of the previous shop owner had me intrigued from the start and created a brilliant plot as Rosa uncovers more clues and works it all out. I have to confess I did work it out quite early on in the novel but this did not lessen my enjoyment of this book.
Mystery, romance and the great array of realistic characters make this a great read. For me though the star of the show was Hot. I’ve never been a dog person, but the cuteness and cheeky character of this young sausage dog are seriously making me reconsider, he was simply adorable.
I can highly recommend The Corner Shop in Cockleberry Bay, its simply a great read.
Thank you to Rachel’s Random Resources and Nicola May for sending me a copy of this book to review honestly and for inviting me to be part of the blog tour.


About the Author






Award winning author Nicola May lives in Ascot in Berkshire with her rescue cat Stanley. Her hobbies include watching films that involve a lot of swooning, crabbing in South Devon, eating flapjacks and enjoying a flutter on the horses. Inspired by her favourite authors Milly Johnson and Carole Matthews, Nicola writes what she describes as chicklit with a kick.


Follow Nicola May

Website - www.nicolamay.com




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Giveaway – Win x 3 Paperback copies of The Corner Shop in Cockleberry Bay (Open Internationally)
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Friday, 6 April 2018

Blog Tour Review: A Home at Honeysuckle Fram by Christie Barlow


A Home at Honeysuckle Farm by Christie Barlow
Published:  6th April 2018
Publisher: Harper Impulse
Pages: 271
Available on Kindle
Rating: 5/5


Blurb
A family secret
One shocking argument and ten-year-old Alice Parker’s world was turned upside down. Her peaceful life at Honeysuckle Farm in the quiet rural village of Brook Bridge swapped for the bustling metropolis of New York City. Alice’s life was changed forever…
A second chance
Now, thirteen years later, Alice’s American dream is over. With her life in tatters, there is only one place Alice wants to be… home at Honeysuckle Farm. So, when Alice learns her beloved Grandie is ill, she knows this is her last chance to heal the family rift.

A forever home?
But secrets still swirl in Brook Bridge, and Alice is no closer to discovering the truth. And for some reason her new friendship with local heartthrob Sam Reid seems to be making the locals tense.
Sick of the lies Alice knows it’s time to lay the past to rest once and for all. But could the truth ruin her hopes of ever calling Honeysuckle Farm home again?

Review
Having read most of her books I’m a huge Christie Barlow fan, I think with A Home at Honeysuckle Farm she has completely knocked it out of the park, I loved this book. It has less comedy than her previous novels but is an utterly gorgeous heartfelt novel.

Alice Parker has been living in New York for the last 13 years after a huge argument her mother had with her Grandie saw them leave their home in the quaint English village of Brook Bridge and move to New York. With explanation as to why her life was completely changed Alice has never fully  settled in New York and her dreams of being a dancer on the stage have stayed just that…dreams.

After childhood friend Grace lets Alice know her Grandie is in hospital Alice knows it’s time to head home and find out the secrets of her past and heal the rift between her Grandie and her mum
Rose.

 Once home Alice is given a opportunity that could make all her dreams come true but can she get the villagers to divulge their secrets and work out why some have been holding a grudge for over twenty years.

A Home at Honeysuckle Farm may not have been the book I was expecting, which was a story more centred around the actual farm, but it was a fantastic read and centred around Alice’s true passion which is dancing and the love of her family.

Alice is a great character, she has so much love in her heart that she just wants to share. I was so behind her as she tried to work out the family secrets and bring her family back together and that she might get a little romance with the gorgeous Sam Reid that she just seems drawn too.

A Home at Honeysuckle Farm is a fantastic read, definitely Christie’s best book so far. It’s a book about secrets, family relationships and following your dreams even when they’re not initially going in the direction you intended.

Thank you so much to Rachel’s Radom Resources, Netgalley and Christie Barlow for sending me a copy to review honestly and for inviting me to be part of the blog tour.

About the Author


Christie Barlow is the author of A Year in the Life of a Playground Mother, The Misadventures of a Playground Mother, Kitty's Countryside Dream, Lizzie's Christmas Escape, Evie's Year of Taking Chances, The Cosy Canal Boat Dream and A Home at Honeysuckle Farm. Her writing career came as somewhat a surprise when she decided to write a book to teach her children a valuable life lesson and show them that they are capable of achieving their dreams. The book she wrote to prove a point is now a #1 bestseller in the UK, USA & Australia.

Christie is an ambassador for 
@ZuriProject raising money/awareness and engaging with impoverished people in Uganda through organisations to improve their well-being as well as Literary Editor for www.mamalifemagazine.co.uk bringing you all the latest news and reviews from the book world.

She loves to hear from her readers and you can get in touch via her website 
www.christiebarlow.com Twitter @ChristieJBarlow and Facebook page Christie Barlow author






Tuesday, 3 April 2018

Blog Tour Review: The Death Chamber by Lesley Thomson

The Death Chamber (Detective's Daughter #6) by Lesley Thomson
Published: 5th April 2018
Publisher: Head of Zeus
Pages: 400
Available in Hardback and on Kindle
Rating: 5/5

Blurb
Queen's Jubilee, 1977: Cassie Baker sees her boyfriend kissing another girl at the village disco. Upset, she heads home alone and is never seen again.
Millennium Eve, 1999: DCI Paul Mercer finds Cassie's remains in a field. Now he must prove the man who led him there is guilty.
When Mercer's daughter asks Stella Darnell for help solving the murder, Stella see echoes of herself. Another detective's daughter.
With her sidekick sleuth, Jack, Stella moves to Winchcombe, where DCI Mercer and his prime suspect have been playing cat and mouse for the past eighteen years...
Review
The Death Chamber is the sixth book in the Dectective’s Daughter series and this time it sees Clean Slate owner and part-time private detective Stella Darnell and trusty sidekick Jack Harmon head to the Cotswolds village of Winchcombe to solve two murders which have been troubling DCI Mercer for almost twenty years.
June 1977, while celebrating the Queen’s silver jubilee Cassandra Barker spots her boyfriend with another woman and storms off home, never to be seen again. December 1999, Bryony Motson disappears after a night out with two friends. Charlie Brice the man believed to have abducted Bryony leads DCI Mercer to the body of Cassandra Baker, linking him to both girls but sadly admissible evidence meant he couldn’t be charged for either murder.
Seventeen years later and DCI Mercer is on his death bed and he longs for Charlie Brice to serve justice for the crimes Mercer believes he committed and for the mistakes which cost Mercer his glowing career. Daughter Lisa summons detective duo Stella and Jack to help solve the case once and for all.
Stella and Jack head off to the country, Stella reluctantly as she is a city girl who prefers the perks of London life including public transport, wi-fi and electricity and not to mention the distinct lack of mud.  Jack is more enthusiastic about their trip, been in love with Stella from afar for ever Jack jumps at the chance to play house with her alone in the country…plus it gives him time to think about the bombshell ex-girlfriend Bella has just dropped on him…he’s going to be a dad.
The Death chamber is a book which could be read as a standalone but after reading the previous novel The Dog Walker I think you will get much more enjoyment if you’ve read at one of the previous novels. The first third of this book was steady and centred more on the personal lives of Jack and Stella than the actual case. I enjoyed this as having read the previous book it was good to catch up with the characters, if you’ve not read the previous book then you may struggle.
Once the story heads off to the country it’s not long before Stella and Jack are fully immersed in the case and the pace picks up, with a growing number of suspects it turns out to be more complicated than they first thought. With the help of journalist Lucie can Stella and Jack solve the crimes? Who is behind the creepy activity with drones, crows and scarecrows? Will anything happen with Stella and Jack and what exactly is Stella’s secretary Jackie Makepeace got to do with everything?
I really enjoyed reading The Death Chamber, its one of those novels where you just keep reading a bit more and then discover something else so read a bit more and before you know it your husbands home and wondering where his tea is (true story).  I love the way Lesley Thomson has added depth to the story with each of the main characters having their own dramas going on which all tie into and enhance the main storyline instead of detracting from it, very cleverly written.  My favourite character in this book had to be Endora the budgerigar, just because of the witty one-liners she came out with which just made me smile.
I enjoyed everything about this book and really hope we have another instalment in this series soon. Thank you to Head of Zeus for sending me a copy to review and inviting me to be part of this blog tour.




Thursday, 29 March 2018

Blog Tour Review: Sunshine and Secrets by Daisy James


Sunshine & Secrets (The Paradise Cookery School #1) by Daisy James
Published: March 19th 2018
Publisher: Canelo
Pages: 165
Available on Kindle
Rating: 4/5

Blurb

When newly heartbroken, michelin-starred chef Millie Harper is offered a job overseeing the setup of The Paradise Cookery School she jumps at the opportunity. Leaving London and her memories of heartbreak behind she hops on a plane to the hilltop cocoa plantation in St Lucia.
But this beautiful island break might be more work than she’d expected….  With only two weeks to have the kitchen installed, cocoa pods going missing from the plantation and the notoriously relaxed island workmen to contend with, she’s going to need some help. Gruff but charming estate manager Zach Baxter, is only too happy to offer his opinions. As the two clash heads can they remain focussed on the job in hand and get the cookery school finished in time?

Review

Heartbroken Millie Harper is about to set off to France for a  holiday with her mum, when sister Jen asks if she’ll fly to St. Lucia and oversee the installation and recipe testing for new cookery school for famous chef Claudia Croft instead. Being a Michelin-starred chef Millie is keen to develop her skills and jumps at the chance to spend time learning about a different cuisine and in such a fabulous location, what could be more perfect.

Millie’s idea of a tropical paradise is soon ruined when she’s left in the pouring rain on arrival and then met by grumpy estate manager Zach Baxter who doesn’t offer her the warmest of welcomes. With kitchen fitters that have a much more laid-back way of working than Millie is used too, missing cocoa pods and disastrous dates can Millie get the cookery school up and running in time.

Sunshine and Secrets is a book filled to the brim with delicious food descriptions, in fact 70% of the story probably revolves around food so if you’re not a fan then this is maybe not the book for you. I love food so really enjoyed all the food descriptions, especially those relating to chocolate, only problem was it left me very hungry. I also loved all the descriptions of St. Lucia, Daisy James has done an excellent job bringing this part of the world alive for me.

Millie was the perfect main character for this story as her passion for food is so contagious that she had everyone around her excited to be involved with the school and the chocolate recipes. This passion helps Millie to gain confidence and with more than one handsome man showing her some interest it’s the perfect place for her to forget about her heartbreak from ex-boyfriend Luke.

This was quite a short read with many characters being introduced, perhaps too many as most of the book is spent getting to know the characters and the main action in the story takes place quite near the end and felt very rushed. I was also a little disappointed with the ending as the story just kind of stopped. I think if the book had been a little longer with the ending drawn out a bit more it would have made the book more enjoyable for me. It does leave the story open for a follow-on book though which I would like to read.

Sunshine and Secrets is the perfect escapist read to a tropical paradise where food, flirting and fun are part of everyday life and is a great book to welcome summer into your life.

Thank you so much to Canelo and Netgalley for sending me a copy to review and inviting me to be part of the blog-tour.



About the Author


Daisy James is a Yorkshire girl transplanted to the north east of England. She loves writing stories with strong heroines and swift-flowing plotlines. When not scribbling away in her summerhouse, she spends her time sifting flour and sprinkling sugar and edible glitter. She loves gossiping with friends over a glass of something pink and fizzy or indulging in a spot of afternoon tea – china plates and teacups are a must.


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