Thursday, March 20, 2025

My Review for The Drowners by David A. Anderson



'We're all sprinkled with crazy. Some of us are just better at hiding it.'

You know those books that stay with you for a long time after you've read it? Well, I think this is going to be one of those. The Drowners was incredible, from start to finish. I never know what to expect from a new author, and I often open that first page with a certain amount of trepidation. I needn't have worried about this one though, I was hooked. 

Set in the early 1990s, Aaron is just beginning to understand his sexuality, and it's difficult, the stigma, the apprehension and the judgment of being queer in 1990s Ireland. Aaron is funny, so funny, and when he and Robbie get together the puns are never-ending. I highlighted just a couple of the lines, which had me spitting my coffee out!

'All those years without draining your nuts is enough to send you loopy.'

'That miserable old bollix isn't knocking on Heaven's door, he's booting it off its hinges.'

It wasn't lost on me that the protagonist has the same name as part of the author's and I have no idea whether this novel is semi-autobiographical. If it is, then it's even more heartbreaking, as some of the crap the main character went through was awful.

Check the trigger warnings before you read this, but if you're all good, then I'd 100% recommend you read it. 

Thank you to David A. Anderson for the opportunity to read and review The Drowners.

About the Book

For Aaron, this world is an unfathomable puzzle. Haunted by disturbing dreams, he drifts through empty days, shielding himself behind sarcasm and cynical wit. After being expelled, he sees an opportunity to rewrite his future at a new school. Connecting over a shared love for De Niro films with Robbie, an aspiring actor of Jamaican descent, he unexpectedly finds his companion piece, one person who truly understands him. Together, they navigate the chaotic waters of adolescence, from dramatic first dates to sociopathic bullies, iconic concerts, drugs, and a dead body.

With adulthood fast approaching, can their unique bond survive the crushing weight of societal pressures and devastating revelations? Confronted by the ghosts of his past, Aaron must choose whether to blaze bright or fade away.

A funny and poignant meditation on the forces that shape us, The Drowners transports us back to a time when our tolerance for hypocrisy was zero and life seemed infinite.

About David

Award-winning author of The Drowners, David Anderson hails from the cold, wet streets of Dublin. Like a Hummingbird, after college, he migrated south to warmer climes. Namely, sunny Spain, where he teaches students who are bemused by hearing the Queen's English delivered in an Irish brogue. In his early thirties, he caught the writing bug. In 2021, he won a YA Watty award.





Tuesday, March 18, 2025

My Review for Famous Last Words by Gillian McAllister, read by Emilia Fox


My head is spinning, and my heart is racing with the fast-paced thrill of this book. 

I found Famous Last Words to be such an incredible book to listen to, it was so, so good. Full of a million twists and turns which were intricately woven into the plot, I couldn't keep up with what was happening, and I didn't want to. Not knowing what was coming next made each chapter more riveting than the last. 

The synopsis tells you all you need to know, anything else will just spoil it for you and to be honest, anyone who knows me will already appreciate that I probably didn't even read the synopsis anyway! You'd be 100% accurate! For me, that just makes it even more of an unknown and even more compelling. 

Emilia Fox was absolutely incredible, narrating this. She is so calm and collected, but somehow she captures every plot twist, feels every emotion and filled my ears with excitement as I listened. I'm off to discover more books by Gillian McAllister and more audiobooks that Emilia has narrated.

Thank you to Libro FM and Harper Audio for the opportunity to listen to and review Famous Last Words by Gillian McAllister.

About the Book

It is June 21st, the longest day of the year, and new mother Camilla’s life is about to change forever. After months of maternity leave, she will drop her infant daughter off at daycare for the first time and return to her job as a literary agent. Finally. But, when she wakes, her husband Luke isn’t there, and in his place is a cryptic note.

Then it starts. Breaking news: there's a hostage situation developing in London. The police arrive, and tell her Luke is involved. But he isn't a hostage. Her husband—doting father, eternal optimist—is the gunman.

What she does next is crucial. Because only she knows what the note he left behind that morning says...

About Gillian - by Gillian

My story is probably not unlike your story if you’re reading this, only I got lucky. I was born in Tamworth, went to a comprehensive school where I was largely ostracised for being nerdy. I spent my teenage years reading Sweet Valley High and chatting on MSN messenger. I went to the University of Birmingham, studied English and then law, and then got glandular fever so badly that I was unable to work for three years. I applied for benefits and got rejected, got into debt, applied for jobs I could do from home, in bed, but didn’t get many. And, during that time, I wrote a novel called Three By The Sea. 

Eventually, I recovered enough to start my legal training, joined a firm part-time, then eventually full-time. I was an unhappy trainee-lawyer, making character notes on blue legal pads in meetings.

Right before I was due to finish my legal training at a law firm and qualify, I got the flu, which prompted a relapse of whatever condition I had (nobody knows: I am pleased to say I am well, these days, but at the time my official diagnosis was ME, though a rheumatologist found evidence of lupus in my bloodwork). During this time, I wrote a second novel, The Quarter-Life Crisis, and queried an agent. To my enormous surprise, this agent requested the full manuscript and, while off sick, I began the process of sending the book off to other agents. Eventually, they all rejected it, and I recovered a few months later and went back to work, but, this time, with something other than an illness: I had hope that, one day, I might get published.

I wrote another novel alongside working, by far the hardest time of my life, my memories of which are sitting in cold train stations at nine o’clock at night, writing on the floor of the waiting room with fingerless gloves on. I finished this novel, For The Life Of Me, six months later, and sent it to the same agents as before, and got signed by one. This agent sent this novel on submission to publishers, eleven of them, and six weeks later, I went to a bar at Christmastime to celebrate finally having qualified as a lawyer. During that party, I idly checked my email, found out all eleven publishers had rejected my novel, and cried on the train home. It was the clearest moment in my life where I realised who I wanted to be. Some of the publishers wanted some amends to that novel, so I rewrote it and the agent submitted it again. This time, three publishers took it to an acquisitions meeting, but they all still rejected it. I found out in the office and pretended I had hay fever. 

My agent asked if I was working on anything else, and I said I had had an idea for a sort-of legal something. She asked me to write it, and I did. I wrote this novel, called What Jack Did, and sent it to her. She said she was going to send it to publishers, and, the night before she did so, I changed the title to Everything But The Truth. Two weeks and six days elapsed after she sent it out during which I heard nothing. On that sixth day, at noon, I got a voicemail from my agent. I was in a meeting, couldn’t listen for two hours. I instead spent the time thinking, had I sold a novel? Or was it more rejections? The meeting ended, eventually, and I snuck down to the bowels of the tower block I worked in to return the call, a moment I will remember for the rest of my life. The green swirled carpets, the old-fashioned phone, the blind with its broken segmented cord. 

She told me that Penguin had made an offer for my novel as part of a two-book deal. It was the only offer – everybody else had rejected it. We accepted it, of course. The novel debuted at number six on the Sunday Times Bestseller list. Since then, I have published eight more novels, been selected for the Richard & Judy book club, the Reese Witherspoon book club, Radio 2 Book Club, and hit the New York Times list five times and the Sunday Times list every time. 

If this is you, it only takes one yes, whatever you’re doing. Keep going, and I hope you enjoy my books if you read them.




Sunday, March 16, 2025

My Review for The Full Nest by Fiona Gibson


Surely there's nothing wrong with a tin of pilchards that are 27 years out of date....?!


Fiona's books are funny, you can usually hear me giggling away to myself somewhere when I'm reading one, and The Full Nest was very definitely witty, with loveable characters, from Carly's eccentric Dad who's addicted to game shows, to Eddie - Carly and Frank's eldest child who finds himself having to grow up superfast.

I wanted to slap Frank around a bit for acting like papa bear and retreating to his cave when the going got tough, but on the other hand, he just needed a big hug to show him that everything will work out when you all stick together.

I didn't manage to have kids of my own and when my stepdaughter's kids stay, I love them being with me, but it's so lovely when they go home!!!

If you're in the mood for an easy-read, that'll have you laughing out loud, then grab yourself a copy of Fiona's new book, you won't be disappointed.

Thank you to NetGalley and Avon Books UK for the opportunity to read and review The Full Nest by Fiona Gibson.

About the Book

One family home. Three generations. What could possibly go wrong?

Carly loves her family. She really does. It’s just that now her three children are grown up, she thought it was her time.

Everyone talks about the empty nest and how difficult that can be, but Carly and her husband, Frank, have often fantasised about it – meals without arguments, conversation without shouting over the sound of the Xbox, holidays planned around the culture not the kids’ club.

But Carly’s nest is far from empty. Her elderly dad needs more support and is moving in ‘temporarily’. On top of which, Carly’s son, Eddie, is far too comfortable at home – why go out and get a job, when your parents keep you fed and your clothes laundered? And just when Carly is starting to pull her hair out, Eddie drops a bombshell that changes everything.

Is there room in the nest for one more?

About Fiona

As a self-confessed magazine addict, Fiona started working on teen bible Jackie in Dundee at the age of 17. Originally from a West Yorkshire village called Goose Eye, she spent her twenties as a magazine journalist in London and moved to a crumbling old house in the South Lanarkshire countryside when her twin sons were toddlers.

When her boys left for university, Fiona felt a craving for city life again. With her husband Jimmy and their daughter Erin, she now lives in a flat in Glasgow. She loves to draw, paint, cook and run – usually with her collie cross, Jack (just the running part).


















My Review for Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie



Smee had pleasant names for everything, and his cutlass was Johnny Corkscrew, because he wiggled it in the wound.

Peter Pan was chosen as March's book for our #classiclitbookclub, in fact I think it was one of the ones I suggested, and I so wanted to love this, but I didn't, I just couldn't. Of course the majority of us know the story of Peter Pan, but I'm sure, like me, many of you have only ever seen movie versions. The Disney version is whimsical and delightful and fun. The book is very much the opposite in my opinion. It's incredibly dark in places, with a lot more implied and actual death than the movie ever shows us. Tinkerbell is quite honestly a bitchy, jealous little fairy who wants Peter all to herself and is quite happy to allow people to be killed, in order to achieve this. 

I found the parents strange, they are supposed to be living in the adult world as their kids are off on their adventures in Neverland, but the Nanny is a dog and as a punishment to himself for the kids going missing, Dad lives in the kennel! I may try this as an audiobook at some point and see if a good narrator can help me enjoy it more, but right now, this wasn't for me.

The painted edition from Harper Muse though is absolutely gorgeous and it will still sit prettily on my shelf with its fellow painted editions. 

About the Book

One starry night, Peter Pan and Tinker Bell lead the three Darling children over the rooftops of London and away to Neverland - the island where lost boys play, mermaids splash and fairies make mischief. But a villainous-looking gang of pirates lurk in the docks, led by the terrifying Captain James Hook. Magic and excitement are in the air, but if Captain Hook has his way, before long, someone will be walking the plank and swimming with the crocodiles...


About J.M. Barrie

James Matthew Barrie was a Scottish novelist and playwright, best remembered as the creator of Peter Pan. He was born and educated in Scotland and then moved to London, where he wrote several successful novels and plays.

The son of a weaver, Barrie studied at the University of Edinburgh. He took up journalism for a newspaper in Nottingham and contributed to various London journals before moving there in 1885. His early Auld Licht Idylls (1889) and A Window in Thrums (1889) contain fictional sketches of Scottish life representative of the Kailyard school. The publication of The Little Minister (1891) established his reputation as a novelist. During the next decade, Barrie continued to write novels, but gradually, his interest turned towards the theatre. 

In London, he met Llewelyn Davies, who inspired him about magical adventures of a baby boy in gardens of Kensington, included in The Little White Bird, then to a "fairy play" about this ageless adventures of an ordinary girl, named Wendy, in the setting of Neverland. People credited this best-known play with popularizing Wendy, the previously very unpopular name, and quickly overshadowed his previous, and he continued successfully. 

Following the deaths of their parents, Barrie unofficially adopted the boys. He gave the rights to great Ormond street hospital, which continues to benefit.


Thursday, March 13, 2025

My Review for The Strawberry Patch Pancake House by Laurie Gilmore, read by Regina Reagan

Archer, Iris and Olive, a gorgeous family in the making...

Laurie Gilmore has once again blown me away with another cute story from Dream Harbor (yes, I'm using the US spelling)! I love the small town vibe, where everyone knows everyone, and that includes everyone's business. The elderly contingent of Dream Harbor are awesome, such gossips, but equally their hearts are in the right place, and they just want to help. 

Olive is a cute, sassy little girl who knows what she wants, and goes all out to get it, and that includes getting her Dad and Iris together. She was so funny and made me laugh a lot. Regina Reagan, as the narrator did a great job with all the characters, but particularly Olive, she had her spot on.

I listened to this book in less than 24 hours, whilst I was outside, getting my garden ready for spring. If you're up for an adorable, slightly spicy, small-town romance, then grab a copy of this and settle down with a cuppa and a packet of biscuits and relocate to Dream Harbor for a few hours.

Thank you to Libro FM and Harper Collins for the opportunity to listen to and review The Strawberry Patch Pancake House.


About the Book

As a renowned chef, single-dad Archer never planned on moving to a small town, let alone running a pancake restaurant. But Dream Harbor needs a new chef, and Archer needs a community to help raise his daughter, Olive.

Iris has never managed to hold down a job for more than a few months. So when Mayor Kelly suggests Archer is looking for a nanny, and Iris might be available, she shudders at the thought. But in need of money she reluctantly agrees.

As Archer and Iris get used to their new roles, is it possible that they might have more in common than they first thought, or is Olive just determined to play match-maker…


About Laurie/Melissa - by Laurie

As Melissa McTernan, I write sweet and steamy fantasy/paranormal romance. I love grumpy heroes, sarcastic heroines, and grown-up fairy tales. I am currently working on The Wolf Brother’s series for One More Chapter (a HarperCollins UK imprint). The trilogy follows three werewolf brothers and their (maybe if they don’t screw it up) Mates.

As Laurie Gilmore (my pen name), I write steamy small-town romance. My Dream Harbor series is filled with quirky townsfolk, cozy settings, and swoon-worthy romance. I love finding books with the perfect balance of sweetness and spice and strive for that in my own writing. If you ever wished you lived in Stars Hollow (or that Luke and Lorelai would just get together already!) then these books are definitely for you.

When I’m not writing, I’m most likely reading or wrangling my kids as a stay-at-home mom. I live in upstate New York with my husband, kids, cats, puppy, and full bookshelves. I write romance to keep my sanity.

















Wednesday, March 12, 2025

My Review for Finding Serenissima by Apple Gidley


Gorgeous, beguiling, enchanting, heartwarming, enthralling! There are not enough synonyms to begin to describe, Finding Serenissima. 

You may have gathered, from the first sentence, that I absolutely adored this book! My favourite trope is 'new life' when a character leaves their old life behind and starts over somewhere new. My imagination always goes with them, and this is exactly what happened as I was reading Apple's new book. 

Apple hauled me from my chair on the east coast of the UK, right into the pages, into Amelia's life and into the winding canals of Venice. I felt every breeze, I smelt every coffee, and I relished every meal that was made. I was right there as, for the first time, Amelia experiences the delights of Venice, the quirky buildings, and some eccentric characters, as she navigates her way through her exciting and sometimes scary new life, budding friendships and the possibilities of love. 

Finding Serenissima delves into a couple of difficult topics, specifically Alzheimer's and the death of a baby. Apple deals with these with compassion and empathy, and they are woven into the story in a delicate manner. 

I've never been to Venice, but I've always wanted to visit, maybe in the spring though before the heat becomes too oppressive and the waters too pungent!

Thank you to Apple Gidley for reaching out and asking me to read and review Finding Serenissima.

About the Book

With the help of a feisty hotel owner, an attractive water-taxi driver, and a gondola full of Italians who call Venice home, Amelia, a widowed Australian, begins her search for serenity. As the island city works its magic, she comes to realize her life has been overshadowed by her famous American husband, Leo, well before his decline into Alzheimer’s.

As Amelia navigates Venice’s winding canals and its language, she gracefully confronts the joys and challenges of aging, discovering that love and laughter can come at any stage of life. Balancing long-distance parenting and familial obligations, she redefines what it means to live fully as an older woman, all while the magical city slowly helps her reclaim her identity.

Finding Serenissima is a heartwarming tale of second chances, exploring the complexities of long marriage, independence, and rediscovering love in the most unexpected places.


About Apple by Apple

I left England a month after my birth when my Australian mum and I joined my British dad in Nigeria. That first plane trip is not something I recall although I have vivid snapshots of events in my early life there.

Educated at NEGS, Armidale, NSW for seven years, my ties to Australia are strong, with holidays spent both at home - wherever that happened to be - and with family and friends Down Under.

A peripatetic life allows me to draw on customs and cultures from many of the countries I’ve called home. Places as diverse as Papua New Guinea and The Netherlands, Trinidad & Tobago and Malaysia and eight others in between. A sliver of my heart has been left in each place lived as people met and events, good or bad, from celebrations to coups d'etats, have become woven into my memories.

My roles have been equally diverse - magazine editor, intercultural trainer, British Honorary Consul in Equatorial Guinea, to mention a few. And now writer.

I am thrilled my last book, Have You Eaten Rice Today? (Vine Leaves Press, 2022) and is receiving good reviews. My next book, this time a contemporary novel called Finding Serenissima will be released by the same publisher in March 2025. 

I'm returning to historical fiction in my WIP - working title Annie's Day which takes place in wartime New Guinea, (Vine Leaves Press, November 2025).



Sunday, March 9, 2025

My Review for Scot and Bothered by Alexandra Kiley



Scotland's beautiful landscape, in all its glory.

I loved being a part of Alex's Street Team and I loved immersing myself into Brooke and Jack's lives and their trip along the Skye Trail, with all the authenticity of the incredible scenery, as the pair are thrown together once again, as they hike their way along, taking incredible photographs and writing up their travels as they go. 

Told in two timelines, then, (seven years ago) and now. We flip between the two with 'then' explaining just what happened between the two of them and in my opinion, the mistake Jack made, all those years ago when he broke Brooke's heart. But now they get a second chance at the love they had for each other, but only time will tell if Brooke can put the past behind her.

Scot and Bothered is another enjoyable read from Alex, and her love and passion for Scotland and all things Scottish is evident through her writing. 

Thank you to NetGalley and Alexandra Kiley for the opportunity to read and review Scot and Bothered.

About the Book

Brooke Sinclair’s dream of being a published author derailed when she was expelled from the University of Edinburgh seven years ago. Now a ghostwriter, she sticks to other people’s stories. But when her college mentor Mhairi McCallister needs a co-writer for her memoir about Scotland’s most challenging trek, Brooke would do anything for the opportunity—including agreeing to hike the rugged Skye Trail for authenticity’s sake... not knowing the nature photographer who’ll join her is Jack Sutherland, the man who shattered Brooke’s writing career—and her heart.

Between getting sacked from the University and walking away from his family’s tour-guiding business to follow his photography dreams, Jack is desperate to prove he didn’t disappoint his family for nothing. And he can’t ignore his Aunt Mhairi’s final wishes for her memoir. Even if it means acting as guide and storyteller for the one who got away. Even if it means keeping secrets about Mhairi’s health.

As Jack and Brooke head into the solitude of the sweeping Scottish landscape, they’re forced to confront old feelings that haven’t disappeared with time. But can two weeks and eighty miles heal years of unspoken hurt and offer a second chance at the end of the trail?


About Alex

Alexandra Kiley writes big-hearted romances full of banter, found-family, and deep love. When she’s not writing, you can find her drinking tea, hiking, or gazing adoringly at the mountains of Colorado where she lives with her husband and two kids. Her novels are inspired by her semester in Scotland where she fell in love with not only the lush and magical land, but also the people who invited her into their homes and made her feel like family.