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Short Book and Scribes

Tag: memoir

ShortBookandScribes #BookReview – The Long and Winding Road by Lesley Pearse

Posted on 11th March 2024 By Nicola

The Long and Winding Road by Lesley Pearse is published by Penguin Michael Joseph and available now in hardcover, eBook and audiobook. My thanks to […]

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Reviews

ShortBookandScribes #BookReview – Eighteen Seconds by Louise Beech

Posted on 2nd May 2023 By Nicola

Eighteen Seconds by Louise Beech is published by Mardle Books and is out now in paperback and ebook. My thanks to the publishers for the […]

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Reviews

ShortBookandScribes #PublicationDay #BlogTour #Extract from A Child of the East End by Jean Fullerton

Posted on 4th August 2022 By Nicola

It’s my stop on the blog tour for A Child of the East End by Jean Fullerton and I’m sharing a fabulous extract with you […]

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Blog Tour, Extracts

ShortBookandScribes #BookReview – Dear Reader by Cathy Rentzenbrink

Posted on 22nd September 2020 By Nicola

I’m delighted to be sharing my thoughts about Dear Reader by Cathy Rentzenbrink today. What a wonderful book this is. My thanks to Camilla Elworthy […]

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Reviews

ShortBookandScribes #BookReview – Mother: A Memoir by Nicholas Royle

Posted on 3rd June 2020 By Nicola

My review today is of Mother: A Memoir by Nicholas Royle. My thanks to Emma Dowson and Myriad Editions for the review copy of the […]

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Reviews

ShortBookandScribes #Extract from The Smallest Things: On the Enduring Power of Family by Nick Duerden @Nick_Duerden @eandtbooks

Posted on 20th February 2019 By Nicola

I’m so pleased to have an extract to share with you today from The Smallest Things by Nick Duerden. It sounds like a delightful read. […]

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Extracts

#blogtour – When Dad Became Joan by Cath Lloyd @CLmakethechange @Bookollective #bookreview

Posted on 28th February 2018 By Nicola

Welcome to my stop on the blog tour for When Dad Became Joan: Life With My Transgender Father by Cath Lloyd. My thanks to Bookollective […]

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Blog Tour, Reviews

#bookreview – Tunes on a Penny Whistle and Tuppenny Rice & Treacle by Doris E. Coates @Authoright #blogtour

Posted on 30th January 2018 By Nicola

I’m delighted to be taking part in the blog tour for these two lovely books. Thank you to Rachel Gilbey from Authoright for the place […]

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Blog Tour, Reviews

#bookreview – I Am, I Am, I Am by Maggie O’Farrell @TinderPress

Posted on 4th January 2018 By Nicola

Today I’m reviewing the wonderful I Am, I Am, I Am by Maggie O’Farrell. I’m a big fan of her novels and I enjoyed this, […]

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Reviews

#blogtour – My Mourning Year by Andrew Marshall @andrewgmarshall @RedDoorBooks #bookreview

Posted on 17th April 2017 By Nicola

I’m on the blog tour today for this wonderful memoir. In 1997 Andrew Marshall’s partner, and the only person to whom he had ever truly […]

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Blog Tour, Reviews

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Nicola Smith - UK Book Blogger

shortbookandscribes

UK book blogger (Sheffield), Bookstagrammer and lover of all things bookish.
Just one person trying to read all the books.
Physical books only.

Ad/PR product. New review: New Horizons for the Wo Ad/PR product. New review: New Horizons for the Woolworths Girls by Elaine Everest. To be published by @panmacmillan on 8th May.
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New Horizons for the Woolworths Girls is especially poignant as it was Elaine Everest's last book. I shed a little tear at the end when I read the piece written by her friend, Vivien Brown, for the loss of a brilliant saga writer whose books I have so enjoyed reading, and with sadness that I won't get to read any more books featuring the characters I have come to love.
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In fact, this book, although a Woolworths book, is a kind of companion to the series. It features Annie Brookes who works at her family's laundry business. Wanting to branch out on her own, she takes a job working for Woolworths in Bexleyheath in 1940. The war throws a spanner in the works and she has to work temporarily at the Erith branch where she meets some of my favourite characters from the series such as Sarah, Freda, Maisie and Betty. I really loved how they were weaved into Annie's story and became her friends.
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Annie goes through some difficult times but when she meets an American soldier she thinks she's found happiness. I won't say any more about that but I was really pleased with how the story ended and I can fondly imagine Annie's life post-war.
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I absolutely loved this wonderful book. The characters have the warmth and community spirit that I've come to expect from Elaine Everest's creations and I found it easy to imagine the settings such as Annie's family home on the marshes and the two stores, one larger than the other but both so relied on by their customers. What a joy it has been to read this book and indeed the whole of this series which is highly recommended for those who love a really good saga as I do.
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Thank you to the publishers for the review copy.
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#bookreview #NewHorizonsForTheWoolworthsGirls #WoolworthsGirlsSeries #sagafiction #historicalfiction #5starreads #fortheloveofbooks #reader #reviewer #bookblogger #booksread #reviewbooks #ilovebooks #booklover #ElaineEverest #shortbookandscribes
Ad/PR product. It's my stop on the #BlogTour for # Ad/PR product.
It's my stop on the #BlogTour for #NewHorizonsForTheWoolworthsGirls by Elaine Everest today.

It's my current read and I'm loving it just as much as I have loved all of the other books in the series. This one is especially poignant as it was Elaine's last book. Review coming next week! 

The book will be published in paperback on 8th May by @panmacmillan.
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#sagafiction #historicalfiction #Woolworths #Woolworthsseries #shortbookandscribes
April Reads πŸ“š ✨The Death of Us by Abigail De April Reads
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✨The Death of Us by Abigail Dean
An intelligent and thought-provoking story of a couple and their relationship before and after a shocking and terrible attack.

✨Closest Kept by Kitty Johnson
A lovely story about Lily whose childhood traumas have affected her adult life, her friendship with Inga, and her relationship with Alex. Emotional and ultimately uplifting.

✨Sanctuary by Tom Gaisford
An intriguing and amusing book about a refugee lawyer who wants to make a difference. He tries to highlight the problems in the system by claiming asylum in his own country.

✨The Sisters by Helen Matthews
Helen Matthews has become a favourite of mine. I really enjoyed this story of Imogen and Rachel and a lifetime of rivalry and jealousy.

✨The Homemade God by Rachel Joyce
A character study of four siblings and their rose-tinted view of their artist father. I enjoyed this intricate examination of a dysfunctional family which demonstrated that all is not always as it seems.

✨The Black Pearl by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
Book five of what has quickly become my favourite series of books. We see all that happens in Yorkshire at Morland Place along with following Annunciata to the court of King Charles II.

✨The Long Shadow by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
Book six of this brilliant series. Annunciata, again takes centre stage amidst political and royal intrigue and family drama at home with the Morlands. The Long Shadow is set towards the end of the reign of Charles II and the beginning of the reign of James II.
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What was your favourite read in April?
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#April2025Reads #AprilReads #AprilReads2025 #monthlyroundup #monthlywrapup #booksread #reviewbooks #reviewer #bookblogger #reader #fortheloveofbooks #booklover #bookishphotography #ilovebooks #historicalfiction #contemporaryfiction #legalfiction #psychologicalfiction #TheDeathOfUs #ClosestKept #Sanctuary #TheBlackPearl #TheLongShadow #TheHomemadeGod #shortbookandscribes
Ad/PR product. New review: Sanctuary by @tom_gaisf Ad/PR product. New review: Sanctuary by @tom_gaisford_writer. Published by @cintopress and out now.
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What an intriguing read Sanctuary is. Alex Donovan is a refugee lawyer, one of the types of lawyers who really want to make a difference, to help people. He's bogged down by his six minute segmented chargeable hours and by the fact that he isn't making as much of a difference to those seeking asylum as he hoped. Add to that his feelings for Amy, one of the barristers that he instructs, who constantly blows hot and cold towards him, and Alex is struggling a bit. After being signed off work, he comes up with a plan to claim asylum in his own country, a daring and potentially dangerous plan which serves to highlight the way asylum seekers are treated and might just also attract the attention of Amy.
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Sanctuary wasn't really like any other book I've read. Alex is funny and sharp-witted, and his interactions, particularly with other legal folk, for whom he has a certain amount of disdain, made me laugh out loud. It's also a stark portrayal of life in an immigration centre, viewing it from the perspectives of those detained, those running it, and a lawyer who just wants to help.
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The narrative is told in punchy short bursts which made it really easy to read and the pace is kept up throughout, right up until the triumphant conclusion. It's a very good debut novel.
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Thank you @wearereadmaxwell for the review copy. 
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#bookreview #Sanctuary #legalfiction #fortheloveofbooks #bookish #booklover #ilovebooks #reader #reviewer #bookblogger #booksread #reviewbooks #bookreader #booksofinstagram #shortbookandscribes
Ad/PR product. New review: Closest Kept by @kittyj Ad/PR product. New review: Closest Kept by @kittyjohnsonbooks. To be published by Lake Union on 6th May.
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In Closest Kept, Lily narrates the story of her friendship with Inga, how they pair off with best friends, Alex and Matt, and how her own childhood demons affect her life and her relationships with those around her, including her younger sister, Violet. As the story progresses, so does Lily's life with Alex, and as is often the case, there are many ups and downs for her in her love life, her family and friendships, and her work as an artist.
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I thought this was a lovely book. It's an easy read overall but it has plenty of depth to it too. Lily can be a bit of a doormat, particularly with Violet because of the sisters' difficult childhood, but she's so kind and considerate and a really likeable main character. In fact, I was rooting for her all the way through, hoping that she would ditch those who brought her down and choose to make a life with those who made her feel good about herself. No spoilers, but I was pleased with the outcome.
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Closest Kept is an appealing novel about growing up, dealing with childhood trauma and trying to move on. It's a clichΓ© but Lily genuinely does go on a journey and she reaches the end with more acceptance, love and friendship. I closed this emotional and ultimately uplifting book feeling very satisfied.
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Thank you to the author for sending me a proof copy.
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#bookreview #ClosestKept #contemporaryfiction #familynovels #fortheloveofbooks #bookreader #booklover #reader #reviewer #reviewbooks #booksread #bookblogger #ilovereading #shortbookandscribes
Ad/PR product. New review: The Homemade God by Rac Ad/PR product. New review: The Homemade God by Rachel Joyce. Published by @doubledayukbooks and out now.
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The Homemade God is a character study of four siblings and their rose-tinted view of their father. Three sisters, Netta, Susan and Iris and their brother Goose have a sometimes complicated relationship with Vic Kemp, the famous artist, but they all utterly adore him. Things change when he meets a much younger woman, Bella-Mae, and he marries her, sweeping her off to the family villa on the shores of Lake Orta in Italy to paint the biggest and most important piece of his life. But then Vic dies and fractures appear in the siblings' relationships with each other and with Bella-Mae.
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The story is beautifully portrayed by Rachel Joyce who manages with great subtlety to steer the reader from one viewpoint to another until gradually the penny drops and the blinkers covering the characters' eyes are removed and they all see the situation for what it really is. To say more would be to spoil but as the late Queen once said: "recollections may vary" and each sibling realises that all they believed is not necessarily either correct or the same as each other.
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This is a complex story of family ties, of a sometimes difficult but always memorable childhood, of what it is to be the eldest, the youngest and the ones in the middle, of living in the shadow of the most capable, or being the one who has to hold it all together. In the centre of it all is a larger than life figure around whom their lives always revolved; without him, they are cast adrift.
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The descriptions of the lake are vivid and I was transported to the villa. The characters are not always likeable but are truly fascinating. Whilst character-driven, the plot drew me in and placed me at the heart of the Kemp family. A different book from Joyce's previous but the high quality of the writing is just the same. I enjoyed this intricate examination of a dysfunctional family which demonstrated that all is not always as it seems.
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Thank you to the publishers for the proof.
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#bookreview #TheHomemadeGod #literaryfiction #reader #reviewbooks #booksread #reviewer #bookphotography #shortbookandscribes
Ad/PR product. New review: The Sisters by @helen.m Ad/PR product. New review: The Sisters by @helen.matthews7. Published by @bloodhound.books and out now.
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Two sisters, Imogen and Rachel, and a lifetime of rivalry and jealousy, made The Sisters compelling reading. Rachel is the stable and reliable sister with her partner and teenage daughter and her property business, and she's the one who spends more time with their parents, looking after them and propping them up financially. Imogen has always been out for herself and now she's unexpectedly returning home to England from her life in Ibiza.
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The author describes this book as family noir which is a perfect description. Imogen being back on the scene is not only discomfiting for Rachel but it also throws up memories of the past, not to mention Imogen's clear desire to make Rachel's life a misery.
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I've enjoyed all of Helen Matthews' other books and The Sisters (previously published under the name FaΓ§ade) is another great read. I really enjoyed the family dynamics and the well-developed characterisations. Imogen is very much a character to hate which makes her utterly fascinating, and I was on edge waiting to see what she would get up to next.
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The Sisters gripped me throughout as lies and secrets came to the fore. The presence of some clever twists in the plot were welcome but I enjoyed the story as just a family drama in its own right too. This is a slice of life story with the reader witnessing the slice where Imogen comes back and tries to ruin Rachel's life, and I felt there was probably some unfinished business between the sisters taking place beyond the book somehow.
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As I've now read all four books by Helen Matthews I'm hoping a new one is in the pipeline, but I'd most definitely recommend all of the ones that are available now. She writes domestic suspense so well.
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Thank you to the author for the review copy.
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#bookreview #TheSisters #psychologicalfiction #domesticnoir #familynoir #familydramabooks #fortheloveofbooks #reader #reviewer #reviewbooks #booksread #bookblogger #ilovebooks #bookish #bookphotography #5starreads #shortbookandscribes
Ad/PR product. New review: The Death of Us by Abig Ad/PR product. New review: The Death of Us by Abigail Dean. To be published by Hemlock Press on 10th April.
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The Death of Us is a literary thriller but it's also the anatomy of a relationship. Isabel and Edward's love story is blown apart by a shocking and terrible attack. This book takes us from their first meeting and their life together before the events of that horrific night, through the aftermath and beyond to the current day.
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This is not a fast-paced read and, notwithstanding the fact that I'm particularly slow at the moment, it took me quite a while to read it. I was dreading the moment when the night of the attack occurred but by then I was somewhat desensitised to it because I knew it was going to happen right from the beginning. It didn't make it any the less appalling and I still avoided reading that section before bed but it highlighted to me that this is not a book about an act of extreme violence and degradation, rather it's one of love, survival and what happens to a couple when they must deal with the long-lasting consequences of that act.
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Abigail Dean's writing is emotive and full of depth. This is a disturbing and devastating character-driven read with two protagonists that I found relatable and well-drawn. The Death of Us is intelligent, thought-provoking and hard-hitting.
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Thank you to the publishers for the proof copy.
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#bookreview #TheDeathOfUs #literarythriller #fortheloveofbooks #booksread #reviewbooks #reader #reviewer #bookblogger #bookish #ilovereading #booksofinstagram #HemlockPress #shortbookandscribes
The Other People by @martynwaites4847 - out this T The Other People by @martynwaites4847 - out this Thursday (10th April) in hardback.

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And Then There Were NoneΒ Β meetsΒ The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle.

Ten strangers.
An old dark house.
A killer picking them off one by one.
And a missing girl who's running out of time. . .

Ten strangers wake up inside an old, locked house. They have no recollection of how they got there.
In order to escape, they have to solve the disappearance of a young woman.
But a killer also stalks the halls of the house, and soon the body count starts to rise.
Who are these strangers? Why were they chosen? Why would someone want to kill them?
And who – or what – is the Beast in the Cellar?

Forget what you think you know.

Because while you can trust yourself, can you really trust THE OTHER PEOPLE?

@likely_suspects 
#TheOtherPeople
Ad/PR product. New review: The Eights by @joannami Ad/PR product. New review: The Eights by @joannamillerauthor. To be published tomorrow by @penguinfigtree.
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The Eights is one of the books I have most been looking forward to reading in 2025 because of its fascinating subject matter. Set in 1920, the story follows four women who are amongst the first women students at Oxford University.
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Dora, Marianne, Otto and Beatrice all have their crosses to bear. It's challenging enough being a woman in what is very firmly a man's world, but the spectre of World War I, and all they experienced and lost during the conflict, is still lingering over them.
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It is quite clear that Joanna Miller has done extensive research about the lives these women would have led, not only as students but as potential surplus women. The book is rich with detail of day to day life at Oxford, being chaperoned and the endless rules that women were forced to live by. I felt as though I was there alongside them, witnessing their highs and lows. There is a back story too for each of the four main characters. Dora's and Marianne's in particular emphasised the immediacy of war during which rash decisions were made and the consequences felt later.
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This is a beautifully written and observed debut novel about female friendship, solidarity and emancipation that made me root for the characters who emerged from the horror of the war years to forge new horizons for womankind. It's inspiring, engrossing and incredibly moving.
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#bookreview #TheEights #historicalfiction
#reviewbooks #debutnovel #debutfiction #fortheloveofbooks #reader #reviewer #bookblogger #booksread #histfic #oxforduniversity #ilovebooks #readersofinstagram #shortbookandscribes
March 2025 Reads πŸ“š Happy April! I feel like thi March 2025 Reads
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Happy April! I feel like this may be a short wrap up post as my reading has taken a bit of a hit this month. I started and abandoned three review books that I just couldn't get along with but my Morland Dynasty reading has continued apace (I am obsessed!). So this month I've only read six books but I've enjoyed them all.

πŸ‘ΆThe Wartime Nursery by Lizzie Page
I love anything this author writes. This book is the second in a loose trilogy and follows a mother and daughter as they are evacuated separately during WWII. Emmeline, the mother, decides to set up a much-needed wartime nursery.

πŸ‘ΈThe Princeling by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
Brilliant third instalment which picks up not too long after book two and follows the fortunes of the Morlands through the second half of the sixteenth century. This era was less turbulent politically than in the previous two books but the reign of Elizabeth I still had its ups and downs.

✈️Scenes from a Tragedy by Carole Hailey
A plane flies into a mountain in the Lake District, killing both pilots. Was it an accident or deliberate? Great structure and a gripping story.

🍏The Oak Apple by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
Book four in the Morland Dynasty series is quite harrowing in places. Some of the action takes place during the English Civil War and the effects are felt back at Morland Place.

πŸš”For Reasons Unknown by Michael Wood
The first in the DCI Matilda Darke series set in Sheffield. Matilda returns to work after some traumatic events in her home and work life and is tasked with solving a cold case. I enjoyed this one.

πŸŽ“The Eights by Joanna Miller
The story of four women who become some of Oxford University’s first women students in 1920. Beautifully written and very emotive, being set so soon after WWI.
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#MarchReads #March2025Reads #MarchReads2025 #monthlyroundup #monthlywrapup #booksread #reviewbooks #historicalfiction #crimebooks #psychologicalfiction #psychologicalthriller #fortheloveofbooks #ilovereading #reader #bookblogger #reviewer #booklover #shortbookandscribes
New review: For Reasons Unknown by Michael Wood.
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I've been meaning to re-start Michael Wood's Matilda Darke series for a while now, mainly because it's set very firmly in my home city of Sheffield. I read For Reasons Unknown around ten years ago on my Kindle but then never progressed to book two and, as is often the case, I couldn't remember the detail of the story so decided to read it again (a very rare re-read in my case).
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DCI Matilda Darke is returning to South Yorkshire Police after traumatic events in her home and work life led to a leave of absence. Rather than throwing her straight back in to her old role, she is tasked with solving a cold case, that of the murder of Miranda and Stefan Harkness. This is stuff of Sheffield lore and Matilda starts her investigation with Jonathan Harkness, the couple's son and the only witness to what happened.
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Some links with what's going on with Matilda's old team arise and bring the story together nicely. There are also some clever twists towards the end and an overbearing Acting DCI that I loved to hate. I think I'd have liked to see the team be a bit more fleshed out but that might happen as the series progresses and this first book has whetted my appetite for more Matilda Darke cases. It certainly kept me interested and is a really good start to the series. This is one for those who enjoy police procedurals and cold cases (that's me!).
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#bookreview #ForReasonsUnknown #crimeseries
#crimebooks #policeprocedural #Sheffield #sheffieldbooks #fortheloveofbooks #booklover #bookloversofinstagram #ilovebooks #reader #booksread #bookblogger #reviewer #shortbookandscribes
Ad/PR product. New review: Scenes from a Tragedy b Ad/PR product. New review: Scenes from a Tragedy by @carolehaileyx. Published by Corvus/@atlanticbooks and out now.
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A plane flies into a mountain in the Lake District. Only two people were on board, both pilots. One was journalist Carly Atherton's ex-boyfriend and the other was Daniel Taylor. In investigating what happened and why the plane crashed, Carly becomes embroiled in a more extensive story which she uncovers by interviewing Daniel's sister, Izzy, and his wife, Grace.
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The structure of Scenes from a Tragedy is really clever. Carly's own notes are joined together with the two women's stories of their relationships with Daniel and I was completely hooked on their narratives throughout the whole book. One character in particular is utterly loathsome and left me incredulous at their behaviour. Talk about a character you love to hate. I don't think I will forget them in a hurry!
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What an exceptional book this is. It's got a mystery at the heart of it: why did the plane crash? The writing drew me right in to the worlds of Izzy, Grace and Carly and the story itself asks the nature/nurture question and explores the murky depths of the human psyche and family relationships. It's dark, it's gripping and it's compulsive reading as it hurls the reader through the turmoil that leads to the tragedy of the title. Buckle up - there's turbulence ahead. Brilliant!
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Thank you to the publishers for the proof copy. 
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#bookreview #ScenesFromATragedy #psychologicalfiction #5starreads #grippingreads #fortheloveofbooks #reader #reviewer #bookblogger #reviewbooks #booksread #ilovebooks #booksofinstagram #corvusbooks #shortbookandscribes
New review: The Wartime Nursery by @lizziepagewrit New review: The Wartime Nursery by @lizziepagewriter. Published by @bookouture and out now.
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The Wartime Nursery is book two in Lizzie Page's The Wartime Evacuees trilogy about three young girls evacuated from London during WWII. Where book one, A Child Far from Home, focused on Valerie Hardman and her mother Jean, this book follows Lydia to Somerset and her mother Emmeline to Norfolk, and explores the effects of a family being broken up in this way.
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Lizzie Page is one of my all-time favourite authors and The Wartime Nursery is just as much of a joy to read as all of her other books. Although it's both Lydia and Emmeline's stories, it's the latter's which features most prominently as she sets up a wartime nursery to look after children whose mothers are doing important war work. With the help of her local MP and host, Emmeline makes a success of it. Such an interesting storyline and the rise of nurseries during this time was something I'd never really given any thought to before.
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There's some heartbreak in this story and some rather sad events. I found Lydia frustratingly selfish and Emmeline stoic and determined, but both brilliantly written characters, navigating their way through the unknown years of the conflict and beyond, into the 1950s. Things felt a little unresolved for some of the characters and I felt like this book formed a kind of bridge for the trilogy. I'm looking forward now to book three, The Wartime Mother, and I'm hoping for a favourable outcome for a couple of characters whose lives haven't gone in quite the direction I hoped they would. I loved The Wartime Nursery, an emotional and captivating book which transported me back in time.
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#bookreview #TheWartimeNursery #historicalfiction #sagafiction #warfiction #bookseries #favouriteauthors #fortheloveofbooks #bookblogger #reader #reviewer #booksread #booklover #ilovereading #bookish #shortbookandscribes
February Reads πŸ“š Happy March! Spring really see February Reads
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Happy March! Spring really seems to have sprung over the last few days making everything look dusty and shabby. I suppose that's where spring cleaning comes from.

I read seven books in February which makes sense given that it's a shorter month and I usually manage eight. Here they are:

🎸The Breakfast Gig by Gerard Nugent
This book returns to Hope Street from Nugent's first book, Let in the Light and is a heart-warming story of community, family and friendship.

🌹The Dark Rose by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
Book two of the Morland Dynasty books that I am loving. This one is set around the time of Henry VIII and his many wives.

πŸš”Making a Killing by Cara Hunter
I always love the DCI Adam Fawley books and this is book seven in the series. It picks up the story from book one of missing child, Daisy Mason.

πŸ•°οΈThe Frozen People by Elly Griffiths
The cold cases that Ali investigates are not just cold, they're frozen. She goes back to Victorian times to find out if an MP's ancestor was really a murderer.

🎨Woman in Blue by Douglas Bruton
The titular painting by Vermeer hangs in a museum. The story is told from the point of view of the subject, both at the time of the painting and now, and also a man who goes everyday to the museum to gaze at it.

🚜Broken Country by Clare Leslie Hall
An achingly exquisite story of first love, second chances and grief. Nobody writes a tragic love story like this author.

πŸ’ƒThe Paris Dancer by Nicola Rayner
A dual timeline story in which Mim in 2012 travels to New York to go through her late aunt's papers. In 1938 Esther meets Annie, the dancer of the title, at a very dangerous time to be Jewish.
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What was your favourite February book?
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#FebruaryReads #February2025Reads #FebruaryReads2025 #FebruaryBooks #monthlyroundup #monthlywrapup #bookstack #reader #booksread #reviewbooks #reviewer #bookblogger #ilovebooks #historicalfiction #crimeseries #contemporaryfictionbooks #TheBreakfastGig #TheDarkRose #MakingAKilling #TheFrozenPeople #WomanInBlue #BrokenCountry #TheParisDancer #shortbookandscribes
New review: The Dark Rose by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles New review: The Dark Rose by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles. Published by Sphere Books.
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The Dark Rose is book two in a long-running series that I'm only just at the beginning of but which I am absolutely loving. This one focuses on the descendants of Robert and Eleanor Morland from the first book, The Founding, and it's their great-grandson, Paul, who is the main character, along with his niece, Nanette.
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As the book is set during the reign of Henry VIII there is a great deal of turbulence in England. Nanette spends much of her time at court as one of Anne Boleyn's ladies and her closest confidante (and we all know what happened there!). Paul meanwhile is back in Yorkshire at the family seat of Morland Place dealing with his son's rash behaviour and his own unhappy marriage and love for another woman.
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There is so much vivid and rich detail in this book and I never wanted to put it down. Cynthia Harrod-Eagles expertly merges life in the north where they are somewhat sheltered from the treachery in the south, with life in the royal court which provides the perfect contrast for the reader, taking in the major historical events of the era in a most accessible way.
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This book is utter perfection in my opinion and I am hungry for more Morlands. Next up, book three - The Princeling.
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#bookreview #TheDarkRose #MorlandDynasty #historicalfiction #5starreads #historicalfictionseries #fortheloveofbooks #ilovereading #ilovehistoricalfiction #bookishlove #reader #reviewer #bookblogger #booksread #shortbookandscribes
Ad/PR product. New review: Broken Country by @clar Ad/PR product. New review: Broken Country by @clarelesliehall. To be published on 4th March by @johnmurrays.
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Broken Country is a multi-layered, beautifully written story of first love, enduring passion and second chances. Beth and Gabriel fell in love when they were just kids really, seventeen and head over heels in an all-consuming love affair. It's Frank who rescued Beth when it all went wrong and offered her a home on his family farm, his love and the warm embrace of his own family. Beth loves Frank intensely but the unfinished business with Gabriel is hovering in the background waiting to resurface and turn Beth and Frank's lives upside down once again, for Beth also still loves Gabriel.
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I can't think of anybody else who writes such achingly exquisite stories about the pain of all-encompassing love in the way that Clare Leslie Hall does. If you haven't read her other books (written as Clare Empson but soon to be republished as Hall) then I heartily recommend you do so as you will find similar features there. It's the main reason why I love her writing and why I was so thrilled when I heard about Broken Country.
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The characterisations are utterly sublime, from Beth struggling with her feelings, to Gabriel's intensity, to Frank's stoic support. Each of these three main players jumps off the page and I felt like I was right there with them. The other supporting characters are just as well-formed and I very much liked the setting of the farm which felt like a character of its own, continuing to draw Beth in and provide salvation to her.
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If you want a an epic love story that burrows its way deep into your heart then Broken Country is for you. The way Hall depicts heartbreak is so so special and tears were shed!. It is the work of a writer par excellence.Β 
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Huge thanks to the author for sending me a proof copy for review.
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#bookreview #BrokenCountry #lovestory #5starreads #fortheloveofbooks #ilovebooks #booklover #forbiddenlove #reader #reviewer #bookblogger #booksread #reviewbooks #bookishlove #shortbookandscribes
Ad/PR product. New review: Woman in Blue by Dougla Ad/PR product. New review: Woman in Blue by Douglas Burton. Out tomorrow from @fairlightbooks.
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Woman in Blue is a short book which packs much between its pages. Its structure is quite unusual but effective.
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Woman in Blue Reading a Letter is a beautiful and enigmatic painting by Vermeer. In alternating chapters we hear from the woman in the painting, both from within the painting and by looking back at her time as the artist's model, offering a fictional insight into Vermeer's processes and motivation. The other strand is from the point of view of a man who goes everyday to the museum to stand before the painting. Everyday he seems to notice something new, consider something different. He can't turn his face away from the woman and her situation, and he hides his fixation from his wife.
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As I say, the concept is quite unusual but it works. It brought the subject herself to life and the whole story is vividly portrayed. The writing is involving and elegant. Personally, I preferred the chapters that detailed the creation of the painting, Vermeer's actions, and the everyday life and thoughts of the woman. I'm not sure I wholly understood the reasons behind the behaviour of the man in the present day. As a whole I enjoyed this novella very much and found it quietly moving and beguiling.
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Thank you to the publishers for the review copy. 
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Ad/PR product. New review: The Frozen People by @e Ad/PR product. New review: The Frozen People by @ellygriffiths17. Published by @quercusbooks and out now.
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Being a lover of time travel I had a strong feeling I would love this book and love it I did. The Frozen People is a perfect blend of historical, crime and time travel fiction, with a story that held me in its thrall.
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As the blurb tells us, some murders can't be solved in just one lifetime. Ali Dawson is a police officer working as part of a team investigating cold cases. Most police officers would do this through research and perhaps new information or advances in DNA, but Ali's team do it through time travel. However, they've never been so far back as Ali is about to travel, to 1850, to find out if a man named Cain Templeton really was a murderer. Unfortunately for Ali, she is unable to make her way back to 2023 as she expected to and even worse, her son is in trouble while she's stuck in Victorian London.
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The Frozen People is crammed with multi-layered masterful plot work that I found myself marvelling at. I'm often filled with wonder at the glorious circularity of time travel, the way that people in the present day find out something that happened in the past and go back to make it happen. It blows my mind. This book has some wonderful moments like that.
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I'm thrilled that this is the beginning of a new series from Elly Griffiths. Whilst some of the story was wound up, there were some strands of the plot that were left open and I'm eager to know what happens next. I loved the characters, especially Ali with her vivid red hair and her 'take no prisoners' attitude. The settings were so vibrant and I was transported to Victorian London, so well-described were the sights and smells that Ali experienced. This book offers mysteries to be solved in an extraordinary way and is exceptionally good.
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Thank you to the publishers for the proof package.
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#bookreview #TheFrozenPeople #historicalfiction #timetravelfiction #crimeseries #victorianlondon #fortheloveofbooks #5starreads #bookish #reviewbooks #reviewer #bookblogger #reader #booksread #ilovebooks #crimefiction #shortbookandscribes
Ad/PR product. New review: Making a Killing by Car Ad/PR product. New review: Making a Killing by Cara Hunter. To be published tomorrow by Hemlock Press.
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Making a Killing is book seven in the DCI Adam Fawley series (eagle-eyed readers will spot his promotion!) and is a follow on to the events of book one (although it can be read as a standalone if you haven't read that one) with a resurgence in the case that Fawley led in 2016: the investigation into the disappearance of eight year old Daisy Mason. At the end of Close to Home it all seemed to be tied up nicely, but Cara Hunter has done a brilliant job at breathing new life into the case with a few cunning curveballs.
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For me, the main strength in this series is the characters. It's always good to catch up with them all again. Fawley is such a likeable and fair man and his team are a great bunch, reassembled to deal with this case, including Quinn, Gis, Baxter, Ev and Somer. I like that there's a recap of the characters at the beginning of each book which is really helpful for those of us who've had a sleep since the last one.
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Making a Killing is a brilliant crime story with some good old-fashioned detective work being undertaken by the team. As always, the book is peppered with transcripts, reports and other innovative ways of telling the story, something I really love about Hunter's books. I thought this was a twisty and clever read, an intelligent and well-written police procedural.
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Thank you to the publishers for the proof copy. 
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#bookreview #MakingAKilling #crimeseries #crimebooks #policeprocedural #fortheloveofbooks #bookish #booklover #booksread #reviewer #reviewbooks #reader #bookblogger #ilovereading #shortbookandscribes
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