ShortBookandScribes Showing Off Some New Books!

I don’t buy a huge amount of hardbacks. Honestly, I find them cumbersome and awkward – give me a nice paperback any day. However, sometimes I just can’t resist the delights of a pretty hardback, only if it’s a favourite author though, or a book I particularly like the sound of.

These three new releases proved rather irresistible to me. I’m sure many people have already seen them on social media but I thought I’d show them off anyway.

Aren’t they pretty? Here’s the big reveal:

I’d class all of these authors as favourites, ones whose books I always want to read.

Shy Creatures by Clare Chambers

In all failed relationships there is a point that passes unnoticed at the time, which can later be identified as the beginning of the decline. For Helen it was the weekend that the Hidden Man came to Westbury Park.

Croydon, 1964. Helen Hansford is in her thirties and an art therapist in a psychiatric hospital where she has been having a long love affair with Gil: a charismatic, married doctor.

One spring afternoon they receive a call about a disturbance from a derelict house not far from Helen’s home. A thirty-seven-year-old man called William Tapping, with a beard down to his waist, has been discovered along with his elderly aunt. It is clear he has been shut up in the house for decades, but when it emerges that William is a talented artist, Helen is determined to discover his story.

Shy Creatures is a life-affirming novel about all the different ways we can be confined, how ordinary lives are built of delicate layers of experience, the joy of freedom and the transformative power of kindness.

 

Death at the Sign of the Rook by Kate Atkinson

Welcome to Rook Hall.

The stage is set. The players are ready. By night’s end, a murderer will be revealed.
Ex-detective Jackson Brodie is staving off a bad case of midlife malaise when he is called to a sleepy Yorkshire town, and the seemingly tedious matter of a stolen painting. But one theft leads to another, including the disappearance of a valuable Turner from Burton Makepeace, home to Lady Milton and her family. Once a magnificent country house, Burton Makepeace has now partially been converted into a hotel, hosting Murder Mystery weekends.
As paying guests, a vicar, an ex-army officer, impecunious aristocrats, and old friends converge, we are treated a fiendishly clever mystery; one that pays homage to the masters of the genre―from Agatha Christie to Dorothy Sayers.
Brilliantly inventive, with all of Atkinson’s signature wit, wordplay and narrative brio, Death at the Sign of the Rook may be Jackson Brodie’s most outrageous and memorable case yet.

The Glassmaker by Tracy Chevalier

Venice, 1486. Across the lagoon lies Murano. Time flows differently here – like the glass the island’s maestros spend their lives learning to handle.

Women are not meant to work with glass, but Orsola Rosso flouts convention to save her family from ruin. She works in secret, knowing her creations must be perfect to be accepted by men. But perfection may take a lifetime.

Skipping like a stone through the centuries, we follow Orsola as she hones her craft through war and plague, tragedy and triumph, love and loss.

The beads she creates will adorn the necks of empresses and courtesans from Paris to Vienna – but will she ever earn the respect of those closest to her?

Tracy Chevalier is a master of her own craft, and The Glassmaker is vivid, inventive, spellbinding: a virtuoso portrait of a woman, a family and a city that are as everlasting as their glass.

The Glassmaker and Shy Creatures also have lovely endpapers.


So what about you? Do you get seduced by pretty books? Let me know in the comments.

6 Comments

  • I couldn’t resist buying Shy Creatures either and now I’m looking at your gorgeous copy of The Glassmaker, which I’m currently reading via NetGalley, and feeling tempted all over again

  • Yes they’re gorgeous aren’t they, though I don’t buy hardbacks for the same reasons you give. Let’s hope the paperbacks are just as lovely when they come out! Enjoy the books.

    • Sprayed edges on paperbacks are not as common, unfortunately. The stories inside will be just as lovely though.

  • The Glassmaker looks gorgeous! I’m reading that just now and it’s wonderful.

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