#Giveaway: Sympathy by Olivia Sudjic @EmmaFinnigan @PushkinPress

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I’m very excited to be hosting a giveaway for Sympathy by Olivia Sudjic in celebration of it being released in paperback today!

Sympathy is available in ebook and paperback now and you can purchase your copy here.

Before I tell you how you to win a copy of this fabulous book, here is a little bit about the book.

Book Blurb:

THE DEBUT OF 2017 THAT EVERYONE IS TALKING ABOUT FROM ONE OF THE MOST EXCITING YOUNG BRITISH NOVELISTS

‘A gripping odyssey into one woman’s online-addled inner life’ — Independent

‘Reads likeThe Talented Mr Ripley for the 21st century’ — Vice UK

At twenty-three, Alice Hare arrives in New York looking for a place to call home. Instead she finds Mizuko Himura, an intriguing Japanese writer, who she begins to follow online, fixated from afar and increasingly convinced this stranger’s life holds a mirror to her own. But as Alice closes in on her ‘internet twin’, fictional and real lives begin to blur, leaving a tangle of lies, blood ties and sexual encounters that cannot be erased.

UK Only Giveaway:

To be in with a chance of winning a paperback copy of Sympathy please RT the pinned tweet on my profile and tag some friends you think might also be interested.

On Facebook simply like this post and comment to enter.

As the annoying meerkats say simples!

I’ll get my lovely son to choose a winner tonight.  Good Luck everyone!

About The Author:

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Olivia Sudjic was born in London in 1988. She studied English Literature at Cambridge University where she was awarded the E.G. Harwood English Prize and made a Bateman Scholar. She started writing her first novel, Sympathy, in 2014.

The Sunday Lunch Club by Juliet Ashton @julietstories @BookMinxSJV #Uplit #TheSundayLunchClub

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Book Blurb:

The first rule of Sunday Lunch Club is … don’t make any afternoon plans.

Every few Sundays, Anna and her extended family and friends get together for lunch. They talk, they laugh, they bicker, they eat too much. Sometimes the important stuff is left unsaid, other times it’s said in the wrong way.

Sitting between her ex-husband and her new lover, Anna is coming to terms with an unexpected pregnancy at the age of forty. Also at the table are her ageing grandmother, her promiscuous sister, her flamboyantly gay brother and a memory too terrible to contemplate.

Until, that is, a letter arrives from the person Anna scarred all those years ago. Can Anna reconcile her painful past with her uncertain future?

Juliet Ashton weaves a story of love, friendship and community that will move you to laughter and to tears. Think Cold Feet meets David Nicholls, with a dash of the joy of Jill Mansell added for good measure.

The Sunday Lunch Club was published on the 19th of April 2018 in ebook and paperback.  You can purchase a copy of this book here.

Book Review:

I so enjoyed this entertaining, heartwarming and uplifting book.  The idea of a Sunday Lunch Club is a fantastic one that I’d love to put into practice in the future as it’s a great way of keeping a family together and to make some memories that could last a lifetime.

The fly on the wall view the reader has of the family lunches ensures that the reader feels connected to the family and involved in all that happens.  It made me feel that I knew all the characters personally and I therefore cared more about them.

There is plenty of action throughout the book that kept me intrigued and turning the pages to find out how everything resolves.  The author uses great skill in interweaving dramatic and sad events with funny and sweet moments that were lovely to read about.  This made the book seem more real as if this could happen to anyone.

My favourite character was Anna.  I admired her courage and how she faced her fears and got on with it when it would have been very easy for her to crumble.  Her love for her family was almost palpable and it was lovely to read about how much she obviously cared for her family.

This is Juliet’s third novel and I can’t wait to read more from her.  I so enjoyed reading about this family and spending time in their company that I was sad to finish the book.

Huge thanks to Simon & Schuster for my copy of this book via netgalley.  I will be recommending this beautiful book to everyone!

About The Author:

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Juliet Ashton was born in Fulham and still lives in London. She writes under a variety of names, including her real name, Bernadette Strachan, and as Claire Sandy. She is married and has one daughter. Find out more at http://www.berniestrachan.com

#BlogTour: The Ice Swimmer by Kjell Ola Dahl @OrendaBooks @ko_dahl @annecater #TheIceSwimmer #NordicNoir #RandomThingsTours

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Book Blurb:

The Oslo Detectives are back in another slice of gripping, dark Nordic Noir, and their new colleague has more at stake than she’s prepared to reveal…

When a dead man is lifted from the freezing waters of Oslo Harbour just before Christmas, Detective Lena Stigersand’s stressful life suddenly becomes even more complicated. Not only is she dealing with a cancer scare, a stalker and an untrustworthy boyfriend, but it seems both a politician and Norway’s security services might be involved in the murder.

With her trusted colleagues, Gunnarstranda and Frølich, at her side, Lena digs deep into the case and finds that it not only goes to the heart of the Norwegian establishment, but it might be rather to close to her personal life for comfort. Dark, complex and nail-bitingly tense, The Ice Swimmer is the latest and most unforgettable instalment in the critically acclaimed Oslo Detective series, by the godfather of Nordic Noir.

The Ice Swimmer is available in ebook now and paperback on the 30th April.  You can purchase or pre-order your copy here.

My Review:

The Ice Swimmer is a fantastic, intriguing book that I thoroughly enjoyed! I’ve long been a fan of Nordic Noir, especially the fabulous authors published by Orenda Books, and this was no exception. The story gripped me from the start with two cases for the Oslo Detectives to solve, of two suspected suicides.  I was immediately intrigued, especially when it soon becomes apparent that everything is not as it first seems.

The author’s style of writing and pace is very easy to read.  I enjoyed how the author tells the story from various points of view.  This really helped add to the tension, particularly when something was discovered in one story that could impact on another character’s investigation.  The facts of the case are gradually revealed with lots of twists and turns that helped increase my enjoyment and kept me turning the pages.  I particularly loved the setting of the Oslo underground and the descriptions of what it’s like underground.  I’ve never read much about how an underground railway works so I enjoyed that part of the story.

Gunnarstranda and Lena were my favourite characters in this book.  I though their relationship was brilliant, particularly the banter and easy conversations that they have with one another.  They seem to care about the investigation and want to find out the truth regardless of pressure from the top to do otherwise.  The author cleverly adds in details of their personal lives away from the investigation which makes the reader believe you know them intimately and hope that they will have a good result.

This is the first book by Kjell Ola Dahl I have read and I so look forward to reading more from him.  If you are a fan of Nordic Noir or like intriguing crime mysteries then you will love this book.

Huge thanks to Karen from Orenda publishers for my copy of this book and to Anne Cater for inviting me onto the blog tour.

About The Author:

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One of the godfathers of the Nordic Noir genre, Kjell Ola Dahl was born in 1958 in Gjovik. He made his debut in 1993, and has since published eleven novels, the most prominent of which is a series of police procedurals cum psychological thrillers featuring investigators Gunnarstranda and Frolich. In 2000 he won the Riverton Prize for The Last Fix and he won both the prestigious Brage and Riverton Prizes for The Courier in 2015. His work has been published in 14 countries, and he lives in Oslo.

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#BlogTour: Body And Soul by John Harvey @John_BHarvey @WmHeinemann @annecater #BodyAndSoul #ElderSeries #RandomThingsTours

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Book Blurb:

From the master of British Crime Writing comes Frank Elder’s last case.

‘This is wonderfully atmospheric crime writing – a tribute to Harvey’s exceptional talent’ Daily Mail

‘The heavy manacles around the girl’s wrists, perhaps not surprisingly, looked very much like the ones that had been found on the studio floor. For a moment, she had a vision of the chain to which they were attached being swung through the air, taking on force and speed before striking home.Then swung again.’

When his estranged daughter Katherine appears on his doorstep, ex-Detective Frank Elder knows that something is wrong.

Katherine has long been troubled, and Elder has always felt powerless to help her.

But now Katherine has begun to self-destruct.

The breakdown of her affair with a controversial artist has sent her into a tailspin which culminates in murder.

And as Elder struggles to protect his daughter and prove her innocence, the terrors of the past threaten them both once more …

Body & Soul was published on the 19th April 2018 in ebook and hardback.  You can buy a copy of both here.

My Review:

John Harvey is an author I have heard a lot about but never had the chance to read.  So I was very excited to be invited onto the blog tour for his latest book, Body & Soul the last book in the Elder series.

Elder was my favourite character in this book.  His love for his daughter was touching to read about and I really felt for him when Kate rebuffed his attempts to rebuild their troubled relationship.  The amount he is willing mount to do to stand up for and protect his daughter is very poignant and really brought a tear to my eye. I didn’t initially like Kate.  I thought she was unnecessarily prickly and rude to her dad when he was obviously trying. However as the story goes on and I discovered more about her and her back story I did begin to feel a lot of sympathy towards her.

The art storyline was very intriguing and added an interesting element to the story.  I’d never really considered what nude modelling entails and the impact the finished result could have on the model.  This did have me feeling very frustrated towards Anthony in this regard for not realising, or maybe not caring what impact his art could have on others, particularly one he was meant to care about.

This was a bit of a slow burner for me as I thought it took a little while to get going.  The author takes time to set the scene and to let the reader know and understand the characters more.  I was a little confused at times whether the action being described was in the present or the past which meant that sometimes I had to flick back and start the chapter again.  I think this was just my problem though as I haven’t read any other reviews saying this.

Body and Soul is the final book in the Elder series but it is the first one I have read.  While the book would work fine as a stand alone I think it would be beneficial to read the rest of the series first as I feel you would understand the plot a lot more.

Thank you to Anne Cater from Random Things Tours and William Heinemann for my copy of this book and for inviting me onto the blog tour.

About The Author:

John Harvey Author

John Harvey was born in London, where he now lives, while considering Nottingham his spiritual home. Initially a teacher of English & Drama, he has been a full-time writer for more than forty years. The first of his 12 volume Charlie Resnick series, Lonely Hearts was selected by The Times as one of the ‘100 Best Crime Novels of the Century’ and the first Frank Elder novel, Flesh and Blood, won the CWA Silver Dagger in 2004. He was awarded the CWA Cartier Diamond Dagger for sustained excellence in the crime genre in 2007, and his story, ‘Fedora’ won the CWA Short Story Dagger in 2014.

In addition to writing fiction, he has written and published poetry, running Slow Dancer Press for over twenty years; his Out of Silence: New & Selected Poems was published in 2014. He has adapted the work of Arnold Bennett, A. S. Byatt, Graham Greene and others for radio and television, and in 2017, his dramatisation of the final Resnick novel, Darkness, was produced at Nottingham Playhouse. He has been awarded honorary doctorates by the universities of Hertfordshire and Nottingham.

Follow @John_BHarvey @WHeinemann
Visit mellotone.co.uk

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#BlogTour: Binary Witness by Rosie Claverton @rosieclaverton @CrimeSceneBooks @annecater #AmyLaneMysteries #RandomThingsTours

Book Blurb:

A young woman trapped by her fear.
A serial killer on the prowl.
An ex-con hiding from a vengeful gang.

As clubbers in Cardiff are targeted by a brutal murderer, the police turn to unconventional means to catch the killer. Amy Lane, a desperately agoraphobic grey-hat hacker, only at peace with her fingers on a keyboard and her eyes on a screen, can peek into virtual corners in ways DI Bryn Hesketh would rather not know about. But he needs her skills, and turns to her for help. Jason, an ex-con looking to go straight, starts as Amy’s cleaner, but soon becomes much more.

An entirely new edition of the first thrilling story in Rosie Claverton’s stunning Amy Lane mystery series, available for the first time in paperback.

Binary witness was republished in ebook and paperback on the 20th April 2018 along with Code Runner, the second book in the series.  You can by a copy of both here.

My Review:

Binary witness is the start of a great new crime series that I’m excited to read more of.

Firstly I loved the partnership that develops between Amy and Jason.  They are a great team, each feeding off one another and complimenting each other.  It was great that both of them were able to help each other navigate through the new world they find themselves in, Jason who is finding his feet after being in prison and Amy who hasn’t been outside for years following a traumatic event.  It wasn’t a normal, stereotypical crime detective pairing which made the book more interesting to read about.  Their personality and quirks helped add a human element to the story which made you care more about them and what the outcome was.  I really wanted them to succeed and prove to others that they could do it.

Amy’s technical ability was very interesting to read about and has made me think twice about my passwords and the stuff I post on line.  The amount of information she was able to glean from the internet was shocking and made me realise how vulnerable we are to criminals stealing our information.

This was a fairly easy read in that the pace was quite fast, with lots of action and reveals which helped keep me interested.  The chapters are short which means it is an easy book to pick up and put down when you haven’t got long to read- great when you’re trying to grab five minutes peace from the kids! The reader is a witness to each victim’s last moments which is allows the reader to get to know each character so that they feel more empathy for them and what happens to them.

Binary Witness was the first book Rosie Claverton wrote and the first that I have read.  She has since written three more in the Amy Lane Mystery series and I really look forward to reading them.

Thanks to Anne Cater and Crime Scene books for my copy of this book the invitation to join the blog tour.

 

About The Author:

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Rosie Claverton is a novelist, screenwriter, and junior psychiatrist. She grew up in Devon, daughter to a Sri Lankan father and a Norfolk mother, surrounded by folk mythology and surly sheep. She moved to Cardiff to study Medicine and adopted Wales as her home. She then moved to London to specialise in psychiatry.

Her first short film Dragon Chasers aired on BBC Wales in Autumn 2012. She co-wrote the ground-breaking series of short films The Underwater Realm. Her Cardiff-based crime series The Amy Lane Mysteries is published by Crime Scene Books.

Between writing and medicine, she blogs about psychiatry and psychology for writers in her Freudian Script series, advocating for accurate and sensitive portrayals of people with mental health problems in fiction.

Recently returned to Cardiff, she lives with her journalist husband and their nearly new daughter.

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#BlogTour #GuestSpot: The Dark Web by Christopher Lowery @urbanebooks @LoveBookGroup #ChristopherLowery #TheDarkWeb #LoveBookGroupTours

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I’m thrilled to be on the blog tour for The Dark Web by Christopher Lowery, the final installment of the African Diamonds trilogy.

The Dark Web is available to buy now in paperback and ebook now.  The ebook is currently only 99p, you can purchase a copy of both here.

Before I share my character spotlight with you, here is a little bit about the book.

Book Blurb:

The latest thrilling instalment in the gripping African Diamonds trilogy!

The tentacles of the Dark Web are tightening their grip around the world. From Moscow to Shanghai, Washington, UK, the Middle East and Europe, nowhere is beyond their reach.

When a computer scientist dies mysteriously in Dubai, Jenny Bishop’s nephew, Leo Stewart, is hired to replace him. Leo’s life is soon in danger, but he is the only person who can find the key to prevent an impending global cyber-attack. With the help of Jenny and old and new friends, he must neutralise the threat before the world’s vital services are brought to a halt in a flagrant attempt to once again redraw the borders of Europe and Asia. Can the deadly conspiracy be exposed before the world is thrust into a new Cold War?

Christopher Lowery delivers a gripping final chapter in the bestselling African Diamonds trilogy, with a thriller that is powerfully resonant of today’s global dangers, hidden behind the ever-changing technological landscape.

The perfect read for fans of Gerald Seymour, Wilbur Smith and Frederick Forsyth.

Character Spotlight: 

Who is your character?

Four Star General William R. ‘Billy’ Chillicott

The Inspiration for your character?

Every influential public personality, from any walk of life, who has cared more about his country and people than self-advancement, private agenda or scoring points to undermine democratic process. (There are many present-day examples of the latter.)

The creation of your character?

I needed a senior military personage for the latter portion of the story, where his position allows him to influence key events. By introducing him early via a personal relationship with Leo Stewart, the reader can more easily accept his involvement with the subsequent crisis.

About your character?

He’s a man who sees the world as it is, not as he’d like it to be. He has spent his life in the service of his country and has no illusions about friends and enemies. He speaks and acts from knowledge and experience, not pseudo-intellectual theories.

Does he have any similarities with anyone ‘real’?
If so … tell us more!

This is a man of a dying breed, there are less and less of his type in today’s self-obsessed vanity world. Examples that come to mind are Reagan, Thatcher, Gorbachev, Churchill, Rees-Mogg.

What do you like most about your character?

Chillicott is a man who worries for all our sakes, not just his own. He would prefer to watch his grandson’s Sunday softball game, but his duty is to work to protect us, so that’s also his choice.

What do you dislike about your protagonist’s character?

He is in a minority nowadays.

Would you and your protagonist be friends ‘in real life’?

Most certainly, if he could put up with me.

What’s Next?

The Mosul Legacy is almost finished, due for publication in September. It is not part of the African Diamonds series, but a stand-alone story of the diverse consequences of terrorism. The book is set in 2016, when ISIL began to lose their strongholds in Iraq to the coalition forces, causing desperate families of refugees to flee from certain death. While they are faced with unsurmountable obstacles in their search for a peaceful, safe home, murderous jihadists are travelling easily through the Schengen zone, intent on committing an atrocity in a European city.

About The Author:

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Christopher Lowery is a Geordie, born in the northeast of England, who graduated in finance and economics after reluctantly giving up career choices in professional golf and rock & roll. He is a real estate and telecoms entrepreneur and inventor and has created several successful companies around the world. Chris also writes technical patents, poetry and children’s books and has recently produced an album of his songs. He and his wife Marjorie live between London and Marbella.

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#BlogTour: Tale Of A Tooth by Allie Rogers @Legend_Press @Alliewhowrites #TaleOfATooth #5Stars

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Book Blurb:

Four-year-old Danny lives with his mother, Natalie, in a small Sussex town. Life is a struggle and when they are threatened with a benefits sanction, salvation appears in the form of a Job Centre employee called Karen. But Karen’s impact is to reach far beyond this one generous gesture, as she and Natalie embark on an intense relationship.

Told in the voice of an intelligent, passionate and unusual child, Tale of a Tooth is an immersive and compelling look at the impact of domestic abuse on a vulnerable family unit.

Tale Of A Tooth was published on the 19th April 2018 in paperback and ebook.  You can purchase a copy of both here.

My Review:

Wow what a compelling, thought provoking and heart breaking story Allie Rogers has written.  This is a story that will stay with me for a long time.

I absolutely fell in love with the main character and narrator, Danny a highly intelligent but unusual child.  I enjoyed seeing the world through Danny’s eyes where there is fun to be had anywhere.  A very observant and sensitive child who describes situations through noises and colours.  He is especially in tune with his mum’s changing moods, describing how she feels through colours.  He loves dinosaurs and can repeat a lot of facts he has learnt from books borrowed from the library, something that made me love him all the more.

Danny’s close relationship with his mother was beautiful and touching to read about.  They have cute little rituals and catch phrases known only to them.  His mother, or meemaw as he calls her, is the only person who can calm him down when he feels overwhelmed which was fantastic to read about.  His hurt and confusion when his mother starts a relationship with Kerry was palpable, especially when everything turns a little sour.  I really felt for him in those moments and wished I could give him a hug.

Domestic abuse is still a little bit of a taboo subject, one that some people want to pretend doesn’t happen and sweep under the carpet.  This is especially true when it is a woman who is the abuser as society don’t want to believe they are capable of something like that.  The descriptions of abuse aren’t sugar coated and they are quite hard and poignant to read about.  They develop a harder edge when it is seen through Danny’s young eyes as I wasn’t sure he was always aware of what he was seeing.  I felt very frustrated towards Natalie at these moments as I wished she would stand up for herself and remove Danny from the situation.

This is the author’s second book but the first one that I have read.  I can’t wait to read Little Gold and any future books from Allie Rogers.  Tales of A Tooth would make a great book club book as there would be lots to discuss!

Huge thanks to Imogen Harris and Legend Press for my copy of this book and for inviting me onto the blog tour.

About The Author:

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Allie Rogers was born and raised in Brighton, where she works as a university librarian.

Little Gold, Allie’s first novel, was published by Legend Press in May 2017. Drawing on her memories of Brighton in the early 1980s, the book is a story of survival and the transformative power of friendship.

The book received warm reviews, including this, from Umi Sinha, author of ‘Belonging’,

‘Reminiscent of Scout Finch, Little Gold is a great addition to literature’s endearing child characters. Vulnerable but fiercely individual, she navigates danger on many fronts – her broken family, her bullying schoolmates, and the dangers of predatory adults – until she finds an unexpected ally in an elderly neighbour. Vivid, touching, sad and frightening, this book exposes the dark underbelly of 1980s Brighton and left me haunted long after I put it down.’

Her forthcoming novel, ‘Tale of a Tooth’ (Legend, April 2018) is a powerful narrative, told in the voice of four-year-old Danny. Jess Richards, author of ‘Snake Ropes’, ‘Cooking with Bones’ and ‘City of Circles’ has said,

‘Explores a narrative which is too often kept private, but nevertheless, desperately needs to be told.’

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#BlogTour #Extract: The Fear by C. L Taylor @callytaylor @Sabah_K @AvonBooksUK

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I’m excited to be on the blog tour for The Fear by C. L Taylor and to have an extract to share.

The fear is available to buy in paperback and ebook now both for the bargain price of £2.99.  You can buy a copy of both here.

Before I share my extract with you, here is a little about the book.

Book Blurb:

Sometimes your first love won’t let you go…

When Lou Wandsworth ran away to France with her teacher Mike Hughes, she thought he was the love of her life. But Mike wasn’t what he seemed and he left her life in pieces.

Now 32, Lou discovers that he is involved with teenager Chloe Meadows. Determined to make sure history doesn’t repeat itself, she returns home to confront him for the damage he’s caused.

But Mike is a predator of the worst kind, and as Lou tries to bring him to justice, it’s clear that she could once again become his prey…

The million copy Sunday Times bestseller returns with a gripping psychological thriller that will have you on the edge of your seat.

Extract:

Chloe scoots up next to Kirsteen on the bed, dips her hand into the bag her friend is holding and shoves a handful of crisps into her mouth. At the far end of the tastefully decorated black and white bedroom is a huge 40″ TV showing a romantic comedy Chloe has never seen before.

‘I heard your mum on the phone,’ Chloe says. ‘As I was coming out of the loo. You don’t think she was ringing my dad, do you?’

‘Why would she? She believes me.’

‘But she seemed a bit suspicious when I turned up at the door on my own.’

‘No she didn’t.’ Kirsteen gives her a dismissive look then shoves her hand into the crisp packet. ‘You’re just being paranoid.’

‘I dunno. She definitely gave me a funny look.’

Kirsteen laughs. ‘Para … para … paranoid,’ she sings the words in time with the chorus of Coldplay’s ‘Paradise’ as she whirls her forefinger in circles near her temple.

‘Para … para … paranoid.’ Chloe joins in, initially because she doesn’t want her friend to think she’s a headcase, but then the rhythm of the song seeps into her bones and she bounces up and down on the bed as she shouts the words. It’s great being at Kirsteen’s house. Her mum’s really cool and laid-back. Her dad too. She’s never heard Kirsteen complain about her parents, other than when they wouldn’t let her stay at a party until midnight. She even gets on well with her little sister Sophie. But it’s more than that, there’s a nice atmosphere at Kirsteen’s house. It feels relaxed, just like the people in it. An idea pricks at the edge of Chloe’s brain as she reaches for her can of Diet Coke on the bedside table and takes a sip. Maybe she could ask Kirsteen’s mum if she could live with them? Kirsteen’s room is big enough to fit a second bed in. She’d sleep on a blow-up mattress on the floor if she had to. They could do their homework together and hang out watching films and stuff at the weekend. She can’t imagine her own family objecting to the idea. They’d probably be glad to see the back of her.

About The Author:

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C.L. Taylor is a Sunday Times bestselling author. Her psychological thrillers have sold over a million copies in the UK alone, been translated into over twenty languages, and optioned for television. C.L. Taylor lives in Bristol with her partner and son.

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#BlogTour #Extract: The Tapestry Of War by Jane Mackenzie @JaneFMackenzie @AilsaCF @AllisonandBusby

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I’m thrilled to be able to share an extract of The Tapestry Of War by Jane Mackenzie today.  Apologies to Ailsa for being late posting this, life is a little hectic with three children sometimes.

Tapestry Of War is published today in ebook and paperback on the 20th September 2018 and you can purchase or pre-order a copyhere.

Before I share the extract with you here is a little about the book.

Book Blurb:

From the deserts of North Africa, to the waters of Scotland, the Second World War touches the lives of two women from two very different worlds. In Alexandria, Fran finds her world turned upside down as Rommel’s forces advance on the idyllic shores of Egypt. The life of luxury and stability that she is used to is taken away as she finds herself having to deal with loss, heartache and political uncertainty. Meanwhile, in the Firth of Clyde, Catriona struggles between her quiet rural life and her dreams of nursing injured servicemen on the front lines. As the war rages on, the two women’s lives become intertwined – bringing love and friendship to both.

Extract:

This extract is from Chapter Two, Chapter One is currently available on the publisher’s website http://www.allisonandbusby.com/booksample/tapestry-of-war-chapter-sample.pdf

Chapter Two
It was tough to go to work that morning, but it was only a half-day, being Saturday, and Fran plodded through it, using her time to write a piece about yesterday evening’s battle between the rival French forces.
The Alexandria Journal was housed in a narrow building in the old town. It was a weekly paper targeted at all of the expatriate and business communities, one of two main English language papers that vied for readership with each other.
Fran had been writing the occasional piece for the paper for some years now, but things had changed when the Journal lost half of its staff at the outbreak of war. There had been three Italian employees who had been placed in internment alongside all Italian males when they became the ‘enemy’. Then the one full-time English reporter had left to work for the Foreign Office in Cairo. So the ancient editor, Tim Jeffrey, had invited Fran to join the paper full-time, and she had found her place in a man’s world, splitting her time between managing the office, liaising with the printing press, editing the work of the outside journalists, and writing the weekly editorials with Tim. It suited her rather vigorous spirit to have a lot of variety in her life, and to be busy. And that they were, for sure, since with so many old staff now gone those who remained were spread very thin.
The Alexandria Journal was never going to rival the daily Cairo papers for off-the-press news, but the paper’s unstated goal was to keep the communities of Alexandria together – no easy feat when the city was so cosmopolitan. There were several nationalities living side by side here, and their home governments held some very different positions in the war.
‘No anti-French propaganda,’ Tim told Fran when she started. ‘And let’s be clear that most of our Italian community here don’t deserve what is happening to them. There are lots of people being badly bombed here who have nothing to do with this war, and somehow we’ve got to write for them. Tell the truth, as far as we can get hold of it, and let’s tell the human story too, of what people are doing to help each other and our troops here in Alexandria.’
It was all very well, Fran thought, and she could understand the need to boost morale, and not inflame a delicately balanced community, but people weren’t stupid. Things were going disastrously just now in the war, and pretending otherwise would fool no one, and the British were so often wrong in how they managed things here in Egypt. Everyone knew it, and many resented it.
A lot of the time, when reporting on local events or the disastrous price of cotton, the newspaper looked not much different from its pre-war years, and for people nervous about their futures, routine reporting was reassuring. But Tim’s instructions left her some leeway to delve into a good story, and she did so whenever she could.
No anti-French propaganda, Tim had said. That was because so many of the community here had links to France, by education, by birth, by friendship. But she could challenge what Naval Command were doing with the French navy here in Alexandria. The Brits had interned the French ships, but were paying the men on board them a salary, and leaving them completely free to roam the city, to socialise and spread whatever propaganda they wanted. That was the problem, wasn’t it? One day hopefully France would take up arms again against Germany, but meanwhile a lot of these men were known to be doing everything they could to undermine the Allies, insidiously, through negative talk and leaks about Allied movements. Surely giving the men so much freedom would lead to more and more raging battles like last night’s, more anger, more knives in the ribs? It was a subject that needed debate.
Fran was aware that she wrote differently that morning to how she would have written a week ago. The young French matelot was always on her mind. She fretted over how he was doing. Had they given him a transfusion? What did you do other than that for injuries like his? And she found herself wondering about the young matelot himself. Where was he from in France? How did he feel about his treatment by the British? Had he goaded the Free French, or had they attacked unprovoked? She needed his point of view, and she wanted to see him again so that she could ask him.
She ran her questions past their new trainee, a fresh high school graduate named Asher. ‘He didn’t look much older than you,’ she told him. ‘Do you see the matelots out and about when you go out for the evening?’
‘Sometimes,’ he answered, ‘but to be honest I spend more time playing football than out on the town. They don’t have a football team, I do know that! Was he badly hurt?’
She nodded. ‘Pretty badly.’ She pictured the young man as she’d seen him last, grey as the morning mist, strapped helplessly to the hospital stretcher. Had he been back at home in France maybe he too would have been playing football instead of roaming the streets. Asher came from a close Jewish family, and went home each night to his mother’s kosher cooking. The matelot was living by contrast in a pretty tough man’s world.
‘He’ll be fine, you know, Miss Trevillian,’ Asher said. ‘I don’t think they’d have lied to you about that.’
She smiled rather wearily. ‘I hope so. I’d like to see him.’
‘You’ll visit him in the hospital? Can I come too?’
She smiled again at his enthusiasm. ‘You can tidy this paperwork first, young Asher! And pop that envelope down to the print. Then we go off for the weekend. We’ve got a couple of days to worry about the article before the paper comes out. It’s a good job, because I’m beyond writing any more today. I’m dead on my feet.’
She left the office for once at the same time as the rest of her staff that lunchtime. She made her way home on the tram and, finding both her parents out, ate a quiet lunch prepared by their cook Ahmed, and then headed gratefully for a long sleep.
 

About The Author:

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Jane MacKenzie has spent much of her adult life travelling the world, teaching English and French everywhere from the Gambia to Papua New Guinea to Bahrain, and recently working for two years at CERN in Geneva. She now splits her time between her self-built house in Collioure, France and the Highlands of Scotland, where she has made her family home.

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#BlogTour: Those Other Woman by Nicola Moriarty @NikkiM3 @MichaelJBooks @Deaco89

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Book Blurb:

Poppy never thought she wanted to be a mother – and then her husband got her best friend pregnant.

Now everywhere she goes, mothers are reminding her of his betrayal . . .

So Poppy creates an innocent Facebook group to vent just a little about ‘smug mummies’.

Except those ‘other women’ are already heartily sick of being judged by non-mums and stay-at-home mums alike. Two can play at Poppy’s game.

Which is when the anger spills into the real world.

Cafés become battlegrounds, playgrounds become warzones and offices have never been so divided between the have children and have lives . . .

A rivalry that was once harmless fun is suddenly spiralling out of Poppy’s control.

She started this – but can she end it?

From the author of the eBook sensation The Fifth Letter comes another darkly comic, controversial and compulsive read that you’re going to want to talk about with everyone you know.

Those Other Women is available in ebook now for the bargain price of 99p and will be published in paperback on the 3rd May 2018.  You can purchase or pre-order a copy of both here.

My Review:

I loved Nicola’s first book, The Fifth Letter, so I was very excited to be offered the chance to read an early copy of the book.

Nicola is fantastic at writing stories about realistic situations that could actually happen.  As a mother myself I have heard mainly the mother’s side of the story so it was fascinating to go behind the scenes and hear the other side of the argument.  I think I now understand a little more about the frustrations women without children must feel and the prejudices they face on a daily basis.  I do hope however that things in my home town don’t errupt quite the way they do in the book.

Some of the situations described in the book are so spot on and are things that I have experienced in my time as a mum too.  For example I often try to hide from my kids in the toilet just to get a few minutes peace!  I found myself laughing out loud at some of the descriptions and situations in the book. Nicola has definitely observed or experienced some of these things as they are just too realistic!

I didn’t really warm to any of the woman in the book as the story meant it was quite hard to.  Out of all the characters I did have a bit of a soft spot for Poppy as I did feel sorry for her when everything starts going wrong and the safety net she has built for herself suddenly unravels.  She did seem quite bitchy and full of herself at times though which made it hard for me to like her completely.

For me this was a slow moving book but that was half of the fun of it as it allows the reader time to get to understand the situation and the women more so you are more involved in the story and more shocked about the events that happen.  The pace gradually picks up towards the end of the book and I was definitely intrigued until the last page.

This is Nicola Moriarty’s second book and the second one I have read.  I can’t wait to read more from her as her stories are always original and relatable ones.

Huge thanks to Sam Deacon from Michael St Joseph publishers for my copy of this book and for inviting me onto the blog tour.

About The Author:

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Nicola Moriarty is a Sydney-based novelist, copywriter and mum to two small (but remarkably strong willed) daughters. In between various career changes, becoming a mum and completing her BA, she began to write. Now, she can’t seem to stop. Her published works include the novels Free-Falling, Paper Chains and The Fifth Letter plus the novella Captivation as well as contributions to two UK anthologies. She is also the younger sister of best-selling and award-winning authors, Liane Moriarty and Jaclyn Moriarty.

Nicola has been awarded the Fred Rush Convocation prize from Macquarie University, along with ‘Best Australian Debut’ from Chicklit Club. She has been published in Australia, The United States and The United Kingdom and her books have been translated into German, Dutch and Hungarian.

The Fifth Letter was a Top Ten Bestseller in Australia with Australian Women’s Weekly calling it ‘a pacey, circle-of-friends thriller, which accelerates in its intensity and sheer originality with every page”; while the UK’s Sun on Sunday said, “With secrets and intrigue, this is a compulsive read.” It was The Librarian’s Choice top pick for March 2017 and was featured in Popsugar’s Best Books for Fireside Reading plus their Favourite Books for the Year (so far)!

Visit Nicola at her website or through one of her social media pages below.

http://www.nicolamoriarty.com.au
http://www.facebook.com/NicolaMoriartyAuthor

https://www.instagram.com/nicmoriarty/
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5347787.Nicola_Moriarty
Email: nicola@nicolamoriarty.com

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