The Book Whisperer

jottings, musings and recommendations of an incurable bookaholic

Dare you read it? Halloween Party by Agatha Christie October 30, 2010

Filed under: Agatha Christie,Comfort Reading,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,Spooky — The Book Whisperer @ 11:01 am
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 The Blurb:

At a Hallowe’en party a lying-thirteen-year-old brags that she had once seen a murder. Only one person, the murderer, believes her and when she bobs for apples she doesn’t come up. Hercule Poirot must reach into a past in which a number of seemingly separate crimes – a knifing, a forgery, a disappearance – become interrelated. Miss Christie even winds up on the wilder shores of mythology in this one and her Hallowe’en Party is a predictably spooky business.”

(source: Amazon.com)

 

What I thought:

This is about the fourth time I have read this book and I still love it. It was one of the first Agatha Christie’s I read as a teenager when I went through a phase of devouring everything I could get my hands on.

I picked it up again this week because of the title. What a perfect book to read in Halloween week, I thought: even thought I have read it so many times now, it has never lost its appeal to me. Spooky? No, not at all. Fun? Yes, absolutely!

The story starts with a famous author, Ariadne   Oliver, who is attending a childrens halloween party in a pretty little English village. She is recognised by some of the children who start to quiz her about her books and complain that there isn’t enough murder in them. One of the group, a rahter unpoular 13-year-old called Joyce, then pipes up “I saw a murder once” before being shouted down and laughed at by those around her. Trying to explain herself she then adds “but I didn’t realise that it was a murder at the time.” The party gets into full swing but before the night is out, Joyce has been found murdered face down in a bucket of bobbing apples…

Aridne sets off to see her old friend Hercule Poirot for help as she has become convinced that someone who overheard Joyce’s claim to have seen a murder had wanted to shut her up. Poirot then sets about busy-bodying his way around the village, in true Poirot style, asking questions to anyone and everyone about what Joyce may have seen. And as in true Christie style, expect the unexpected!

I’m so glad I read this book again – picking up an Agatha Christie is like meeting up with an old friend; it’s a real tonic.

I was also delighted to discover that ITV did an adaptation of this very book this week on TV. I thought it was so well done, with a brilliant cast and they made it so spooky and atmospheric. If you didn’t see it or you don’t live in the UK, you can still see it here online for the time being – give yourself a halloween treat and watch it.

 

Spooky rating:

A great mystery book set at halloween. Will it scare you? Not a chance. Will you love it? Absolutely!

 

 

 

 

Dare you read it? Dark Matter: A Ghost Story by Michelle Paver October 29, 2010

Filed under: Horror,Michelle Paver,Spooky — The Book Whisperer @ 8:44 am
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The Blurb:

“‘What is it? What does it want? Why is it angry with me?’ January 1937. Clouds of war are gathering over a fogbound London. Twenty-eight year old Jack is poor, lonely and desperate to change his life. So when he’s offered the chance to be the wireless operator on an Arctic expedition, he jumps at it. Spirits are high as the ship leaves Norway: five men and eight huskies, crossing the Barents Sea by the light of the midnight sun. At last they reach the remote, uninhabited bay where they will camp for the next year. Gruhuken. But the Arctic summer is brief. As night returns to claim the land, Jack feels a creeping unease. One by one, his companions are forced to leave. He faces a stark choice. Stay or go. Soon he will see the last of the sun, as the polar night engulfs the camp in months of darkness. Soon he will reach the point of no return – when the sea will freeze, making escape impossible. And Gruhuken is not uninhabited. Jack is not alone. Something walks there in the dark.”

(source: Amazon.com)

  What I thought:

I just had to have this book as soon as I saw it nominated by Sarah from BookRabbit on my What’s Spooking the Publishers? post. Since seeing that, I have also seen lots more hype about this book on the web. I grabbed up a copy for myself last weekend and read it this week for a spooky treat.

The book is written in the form of a journal by Jack Miller, a London misfit with a dead-end job and no friends who joins an expedition to the Arctic Circle in the 1937. Jack is desperate to go and has looked forward to this adventure for six months before setting off so his spirits are high as soon as he steps onto the boat to take them to the bay of Gruhuken in nothern Norway.

However, Jack’s joy soon takes a downward turn as one by one, members of the expidition drop like flies and he is left alone, with just a pack of huskies and a self-built hut in one of the remotest parts of the world. Not only that, but Jack begins to see and hear things that aren’t really there. Or are they?

I found this book incredibly well written and what I found was that the way the isolation and deprivation were played out over the pages was far more spooky than the ghost that was inhabiting the bay with Jack. The sense of fear as Jack slowly began to lose his mind imagining things that had moved or appeared was palpable and made for very chilly reading.

Jack’s relationship with one of the dogs, Isaak, was the only warming part of this icy tale but it was a welcome relief in such a desolate text.

Although I enjoyed this book immensly and would recommend it as a great read, I am disappointed to report that it didn’t scare me in the least (and I am a complete wimp when it comes to scary things).

Spooky rating:

Definitely eerie and atmospheric and a great ending to the book, but alas it did not scare me :(

Those of a nervous disposition may want to avoid or read with the light on though.

 

 

 

Dare you read it? What is spooking book bloggers? October 27, 2010

Filed under: Horror,Paranormal,Spooky — The Book Whisperer @ 6:18 pm
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This time it’s the turn of the bloggers. Some of my favourite book bloggers have agreed to share their spookiest and scariest books with us (and one will even tell us why reading a scary book put her off reading any more for life!)

 

Leeswammes’ Blog

Judith at Leeswammes’ Blog is a blogger from Holland and she has picked Phantoms by Dean Koontz

 

 

Two sisters return to their hometown and find a whole quiet, empty town. They find some bodies, but not enough to account for everyone. Where are the inhabitants of Snowfield gone?

There is lots of suspense while the creature is after the sisters and police officers. It feeds on humans and can also take their form and voice. So it’s never certain whether someone is a human or really the monster.

Not to be read when you’re home alone!

 

Coffee and a Book Chick

Natalie, Coffee and a Book Chick, is from the USA and her picks are The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova and The Ruins by Scott Smith (she couldn’t pick just one)

 

 

The Historian, by Elizabeth Kostova – This is an incredibly haunting read.  A lot of reviews gauge it as written in a very Victorian-esque manner, and I would agree with that.  It slowly moves but in a quiet way that keeps you entrenched in the story.  This is an incredibly creepy book to read by yourself.


The Ruins, by Scott Smith – I’m absolutely going to throw out this into the fray, and I know it’s a different recommendation since there are no ghosts or ghouls.  It was made into a pretty horrible movie, unfortunately.  The reviews on the book are fairly mixed, but I think what people missed out on in the book was that it was primarily an incredibly disturbing psychological thriller.  There were some scenes in there that were incredibly, incredibly frightening.

 

Bella’s Bookshelves

Steph from Bella’s Bookshelves is a Candadian book blogger and she has chosen The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold (as well as giving us loads of other great ideas for spooky reading).

 

 

There are so many books that gave me serious chills, like Turn of the Screw by Henry James, Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon, The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova, The Halloween Tree by Ray Bradbury, Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury, Alfred Hitchcock’s anthologies of ghost stories, gothic tales by Edgar Allan Poe, and One Bloody Thing After Another by Joey Comeau.
 
But the one I recall making me the most scared was The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold. I don’t even think it’s all that well written, truth be told, but it’s definitely a page-turner! All day I sat reading that book; I finished it in one sitting. By the time I turned the last page it was after midnight and the hubby had gone upstairs to bed. Suddenly, my imagination just ran wild, thinking of evil killers randomly targeting our apartment, shooting through the window or breaking in. None of this happened in The Lovely Bones, but I guess Sebold really got in my head telling the story from a dead girl’s perspective who’d been brutally murdered. I remember the light switch was downstairs, so you had to turn it off and walk up in the dark in this 1800s apt. I was so scared my heart was pounding and I was literally crawling up the stairs, making myself as small as possible. I climbed into bed, without washing, and clung to my husband until the nightmarish feeling passed.
 

 

 

She Reads Novels

Helen from She Reads Novels is a UK blogger from the north of England and she has nominated The Resurrectionists by Kim Wilkins.

 

 

One of the scariest books I remember reading was The Resurrectionists by Kim Wilkins.  The Resurrectionists is the story of Maisie, a young Australian woman who comes to live in her grandmother’s old house in the isolated Yorkshire village of Solgreve.  When Maisie discovers a diary from the 1700s she begins to uncover the tragic story of one of the house’s previous occupants, Georgette, and her poet lover Virgil.  But how is Georgette’s story connected with the dark wraith-like figures who haunt Maisie’s garden?   With great characters such as Sacha the gypsy and the sinister Dr Flood, and a wonderfully atmospheric setting with an ancient cathedral and a huge cliff top cemetery, this is a genuinely spooky gothic horror story.  Sadly this book is now very difficult to find, but if you can lay your hands on a copy I highly recommend reading it!

 

Novel Insights

Polly from Novel Insights is another UK blogger and lives in London. She has offered up two creepy short stories.

 

 

The Haunted Hotel, by Wilkie Collins is not the scariest book I’ve ever read but it definitely ticks the creepy box. Actually, what I love about it is that it’s a real old-fashioned ghost story and perfect for curling up with on a cold dark night. What could be a better spooky combination than a haunted hotel (ghostly goings on in room number 13 of course!), a mysterious disappearance, and a mad countess – all set in the dark and watery atmosphere of Venice? Collins also throws in a pinch of mystery and drama as well as his slightly tongue-in-cheek wit.



Don’t Look Now by Daphne DuMaurier is a short story that left me with chills running down my back. A bereaved couple go on a trip to Venice to patch up their relationship after the death of their daughter. When they encounter a pair of creepy twins at lunch one day, a prediction is made which casts a dark shadow on the holiday. I don’t want to give too much of the plot away as the ending really hit me with a jolt which is part of the fun (if you like spooky stories!), but next to Stephen King’s Misery It is definitely the creepiest story that I have read. One that’ll make you want to go make a comforting cup of cocoa afterwards to shake off the chills.

 

 Chasing Bawa

Sakura at Chasing Bawa is a UK blogger living in London and she has chosen Tanith Lee’s short story collection, Dreams of Dark and Light as her scary read.

 

 

Some of my favourite fiction growing up was gothic horror although I’m more interested in the macabre than a gore-fest. I first came across Tanith Lee’s collection of short fiction Dreams of Dark and Light at school and was instantly smitten by the fictional landscapes she creates. My favourite story in that collection is Bite-Me-Not or, Fleur de Fur, a retelling of the vampire myth. It’s achingly beautiful and I wish her stories were read more widely. Another off-beat author I really liked is Poppy Z. Brite. Her stories are a natural extension of Anne Rice’s, set in New Orleans, but a little more grunge. I spent many a night nestled in bed reading Lost Souls, about two young men obsessed with life and death. Although I’m not often frightened by books, these two books will send a gentle chill down your spine on a long winter’s night.

And lastly, the only book that scared the living daylights out of me was the novelisation of The Alien films, The Complete Alien Omnibus by Alan Dean Foster. Purists may sneer but I’ll never forget the feeling of fear I experienced reading this in a silent house in the middle of the night, even though my sister was sleeping right next to me. So beware…

 

 

Giraffe Days

Shannon at Giraffe Days is a Canadian blogger, originally from Tasmania. She has chosen three books that gave her the heebie-jeebies:

 

 

Kazuro Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go is a truly chilling book, one that you can’t get out of your head. I read it a few years ago for a bookclub I was in,  and last month I saw the film adaptation at TIFF and it was just as scary, if not more so for seeing flesh and blood people in it.

It was the first book that came to mind when Boof asked me about scary books, even though it’s not a typical example. The downside is that I can’t tell you what it’s about! I can tell you that it’s set in the 70s, 80s and 90s in the UK, is a story about an alternate history and a dystopian society – but truly the less you know about the subject matter or the main characters, the more powerful the story will be when you read it. I can give you the blurb on the back of the book, because it doesn’t give anything away:

As children, Kathy, Ruth and Tommy were students at Hailsham, an exclusive boarding school secluded in the English countryside. It was a place of mercurial cliques and mysterious rules – and teachers who were constantly reminding their charges of how special they were.

Now, years later, Kathy is a young woman. Ruth and Tommy have re-entered her life, and for the first time she is beginning to look back at their shared past and understand just what makes them so special – and how that will shape the rest of their time together.

What’s chilling about it is the premise (not disclosed in the blurb), and also the unquestioning nature of the protagonists, which shows you how society can get away with heinous things when those it affects most are raised in such a way that they never even consider questioning it or fighting it. Their complete acquiescence and obedience is terrifying, and very very sad.

My next choice is Battle Royale by Koushun Takami. When I was living in Japan I got this movie out called Battle Royale - it had English subtitles – and was blown away by the story. It was terrifying. I got hold of the book a few years later and it was just as I remembered it, and just as chilling.

The premise is this: set in an alternate present-day (or possibly near future; it isn’t clarified), the government has developed a forceful method of keeping youth in check: every year it randomly takes a class of teens to an island, puts explosive collars on their necks, arms them with everything from guns to poison to crow bars, and tells them to kill each other. There can only be one winner.

You’ve gotta hand it to the Japanese for having the most inventive imaginations; truly I am in awe of the stories that come out of the country. The story here is scary because it takes an unsuspecting class of over 30 students who think they’re on their way to a camp, puts them to sleep on the bus with a gas, and then when they wake up in a strange place with exploding collars around their neck, are faced with the unbelievable truth. They are completely disposable, who their parents are can’t save them, and when they realise that the man in charge is in deadly earnest (literally, he shoots one of the kids to show that he’s not kidding), their nightmare begins. It’s kill or be killed. With such a large group of kids, pretty much every way of dying is explored. (I find it interesting, this Japanese preoccupation with death and suicide; it’s different from how we approach it I guess, stemming from a different culture and philosophy … but I digress.)

Whether you watch the movie or read the book, either way you’re in for a real scary Halloween treat – if you think those slasher flicks are gory, you haven’t seen anything yet!

Finally, Ten Little Niggers by Agatha Christie, renamed And Then There Were None for obvious reasons. The edition pictured is the one I have, which I borrowed from my sister and never gave back because I loved it so much!

This was the first Christie book I ever read, and it was so powerful and intense and frightening I don’t honestly think any of her other books will ever please me in such a satisfying way!

Ten people are invited to a fabulous mansion on Nigger Island off the coast of Devon. Though they all have something to hide, they arrive hopefully on a glorious summer evening … But soon a series of extraordinary events take place: the island is suddenly bathed in a most sinister light … panic grips the visitors one, by one … by one, by one …

Ten people arrive and then begin dying one by one. You never knew who was going to be next, or how they would die – but they ALL died. So the mystery is: who killed them? They’re all dead! Or are they…?

I was about 14 when I read this and I’ve never been able to forget it – the details are nicely faded so it’s ripe for a re-read. It’s very scary because of the unpredictability of the killings – and some of them are pretty elaborate if I remember correctly. There was such an atmosphere of tension, fear and menace. The people were stuck on this island, with no way off, while something picked them off one by one. 
Now that I’ve talked about all three together, it’s interesting to see what such different books have in common – and to see what I consider to be truly scary! They are like slasher movies with a conscience and a social message. There’s also a hopelessness to them all, in that they don’t have happy endings Battle Royale sort of does, and yet doesn’t). They’re less “spooky” and more “chilling”, which I find to really scary!

 

 

 

 What a fantastic looking collection of spooky and scary books from some fab book bloggers. I have to admit that I have already managed to snaffle a few for myself after reading these so watch this space…

 

Did you find something you want to read? Are you brave enough to pick one of these books up?

 

 

New Arrivals! October 26, 2010

Filed under: Uncategorized — The Book Whisperer @ 7:58 pm

  I deserve to buy myself new books because…

(check all that apply)

  • I’m working so hard in my new job and deserve a treat
  • Authors have worked so hard on these books so it would be rude not to buy them
  • It’s raining
  • It’s Tuesday / Wednesday / Friday (delete as appropriate)
  • I have a homing device (much like pigeons) which means I cannot resist the pull of a bookshop from anything under a mile radius
  • One day there there may be an apocolypse and only I will survive – I would need books, right?

 

  So, on that note…..here’s what’s new at Chez Whisperer:

 

My new babies

The following are from a garden centre near my home that has a book section and has a huge random selection of books (brand new) for £1.00 each. It’s one of my favourite places to go :)

 

Leviathan by Philip Hoare - I have wanted this ever since I interviewed Susan Fletcher (author of one of my favourite books this year) and she said that she couldn’t get this book out of her head.

Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury – I have been looking out for a copy of this book since someone recommended it for my Halloween Scary reads posts so I was so excited to find it for only £1.00!

Uglies by Scott Westerfield - I have heard great things about this YA read and I am really keen to read it soon

Replay by Ken Grimwood -  A friend of mine on Goodreads read this about a year ago and raved about it. I have been on the lookout for it since in shops and on the swap sites etc but never found a copy so I was nearly did a cartwheel in the shop when I found this. Have you seen Isla Fisher as Becky Bloomwood in Confessions of a Shopaholic when she finds that pair of boots? Yep, that was me with this book!

Twisted Wing by Ruth Newman – I have picked this book up a few times but never bought it (don’t know why). It looks like a great psychological thriller.

 

These two books were sent to me by the publisher:

I am Spartapuss and Cleocatra’s Kushion - these two books were sent to me by Mogzilla. They are aimed at children but they are set in historical times (ancient Rome etc) and the main characters are cats. What’s not to love? I swear my cats are plotting to take over the world so I’m preparing myself….

 

These are books that I bought on a recent jaunt in Waterstones (ahh, my utopia):

Winter Ghosts by Kate Mosse – It’s about ghosts. It’s Halloween. Nuff said.

Dark Matter: A Ghost Story by Michelle Paver - More spookiness. This book was Sarah at BookRabbit’s choice on the “What’s Spooking the Publishers?” post so I had to snap up a copy.

The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner by Stephenie Meyer – Yep! I love the Twilight series. Don’t judge me – it’s my guilty pleasue. I still have Breaking Dawn to read but Bree Tanner comes before that so I’m still in order. Oh and can I just get in a mention of RPatz???? Hubba Hubba!!!!!

Crescendo by Becca Fitzpatrick - I read Hush Hush, the first in the series, about a year ago and I loved it! I also intereviewed Becca on this blog and she was still writing this book then so I am so excited to read this.

 

Has anyone read any of these? Which one(s) did you enjoy? Would love to hear your thoughts.

 

 

Boof’s Blah Blah Blah’s October 25, 2010

Filed under: Uncategorized — The Book Whisperer @ 8:19 am
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My birthday weekend

I’ve been so busy I haven’t even had a chance to tell you all about my birthday weekend 2 weeks ago: 

Mr Whisperer took me to a little cottage by the beach in west Wales for my birthday. We had a deck overlooking the sea and the weather was so mild that we could sit out and watch the waves and chill out in wonderful peace and quiet.

As well as chilling at the cottage, we went for long walks on the beach and we also went for a walk along a river (in T-shirts, it was so warm) in the middle of Snowdonia and stopped for tea and cake (yep – there was quite a lot of this went on all weekend ;) ). We also went up to Conwy on the north Wales coast and wandered around the castle walls and had a nosey inside the smallest house in the UK (which is literally one tiny room downstairs and one tiny room upstairs – so quirky). 

 

Walking in Beddgelert, Snowdonia

Smallest house in Britain



View from our cottage

 

On the day of my birthday, I awoke to the smell of fresh coffee and crumpets coming from the conservatory of the cottage that overlooks the sea. I was greeted by a scrummy breakfast and a pile of cards and presents.

Now, I have whinged and moaned so often in the past about my lack of booky presents in the past that you can imagine my shock to open this:

My Kindley treat

I had absolutely no idea I was getting this as I hadn’t really ever considered getting an e-reader before. I love the look, feel and smell of books and e-readers almost seemed impersonal. I am a convert! OK, that’s not stricktly true as I still love my books but I have to admit that I have loved every minute of setting up my Kindle and downloading books – I didn’t know I could get so many for FREE!!! It was so useful for the last few weeks as I have been away training for my new job and where I would normally have a suitcase full of more books than clothes for this lenghth of stay, I only needed to pack my Kindle (well, OK, I took 3 books too – a girl has to have options!)

My new toy, complete with shiny red leather folder

What do you think to e-readers?

 

And finally…

Look what my gorgeous nieces bought me for my birthday:

Cats and books - what more is there to life?

How well they know me! ;)

Have a great week everyone!

 

Dare you read it? What is spooking our favourite authors? October 21, 2010

 

 

 
They write the books we love reading; some of them even write crime ficiton to tease and terrify us. But what scary books do our favourite authors read themselves? What sends them scurrying back under the covers? Let’s find out….
 

Lindwood Barclay

 

 

Linwood Barclay is the author of four crime fiction novels including No Time for Goodbye. He has chosen Carla Buckley’s The Things That Keep Us There as his scary read.

 

Linwood Barclay's choice

 The scariest book I’ve read in a while is The Things That Keep Us Here, by Carla Buckley. It’s not a traditional horror novel, but a thriller about an outbreak of avian flu. Vampires, aliens, serial killers — they can be pretty scary, but at some level you think, this really couldn’t happen to me. Certainly  not  the vampires. But Buckley’s novel is set in a middle America and features people we know. And when the epidemic hits, and unleashes its terrors, you can’t help wondering what you would do if this kind of plague hit your own community. The story is rooted in today’s headlines. I found, when I put this book down to do other things, I was still thinking about it. 

 

 

Elly Griffiths 

Elly Griffiths is author of the forensic archaeology crime series, starting with The Crossing Places.

Elly Griffiths' choice

  My favourite ghost story is M.R. James’ Oh, Whistle, and I’ll come to you, my lad. For me it has everything a ghost story should have: a wonderful setting on a lonely East Coast beach, a buried object, a tantalising clue, a ghostly wind and night-time horror which may be nothing – and yet may be something. Just reading the title makes me shiver and yet, in the end, the ghost may be nothing but a pile of old clothes….

 

 

R J Ellory

 Roger J Ellory is the author of several crime fiction books including A Simple Act of Violence, A Quiet Belief in Angels, Candlemoth, The Anniversary Man and his brand new book Saints of New York.
  

 

R J Ellory's choice

 I was thirteen years old.  I was ill with chicken pox at boarding school and quarantined.  It was a twelve-bed room, and I was in there alone.  The door was locked.  Through the round porthole window of that door was a long black-and-white checkerboard tiled corridor.  Every once in a while I would hear the nurses’ footsteps outside.  I would hurry to the window, but by the time I got there whoever had been out there had disappeared into another room.  Hence I kept hearing people who didn’t really exist.  And then I decided to read ‘The Shining’.  Unnerving, disturbing, unsettling, creepy, provoking fitful sleep and disturbed dreams right to the end.  Half the book I didn’t really understand, and half of it scared the hell out of me.  It was the first time I was truly aware of the power that fiction possessed to evoke an emotional response.  I have read the book again since, and not only is it a great book, but it reminds me of how I felt at thirteen years old.

 

Gail Carriger

Gail Carriger is the author of the fabulous steampunk Parasol Protectorate series – the first three books in the series are Soulless, Changeless and Blameless.

 

 

I’m going to suggest Poe’s short story “The Cask of Amontillado.” I read this story first in High School and it has stuck with me ever since. There is something about not only the creepiness, but also the clean directness of the writing, and seeing an event from the mind of evil that only Poe can handle with such elegance. Oh, and it scared the hell out of me.

 

 

Emma Donoghue

Emma Donoghue is the author of this years Man Booker nominated book, ROOM.

 

 

Emma chose The Road by Cormac McCarthy. 

“THE ROAD, by Cormac McCarthy, scared the bejaysus out of me.  I found his vision of a destroyed Earth – vague in the details of how it happened, but precise in the descriptions of the grey, cold wasteland that resulted – dreadfully credible. And the idea that human emotions such as parent-child love go on in an even more intense form, after the apocalypse, didn’t comfort me but scared me even more.  The idea that love might come down to: do I shoot my child now before the cannibals catch him?”

 

 

Katherine Webb

Katherine Webb is the author of this summer The TV Book Club’s The Legacy.

 

 

Katherine has chosen Hawksmoor by Peter Ackroyd as her spookiest read.

“ Hawksmoor by Peter Ackroyd is set partly in the present day, with a detective struggling to solve a series of grisly murders in London; and partly in the eighteenth century, as architect Nicholas Dyer begins to use ritual violence and the black arts to plant a dark heart at the centre of each new church he builds. Past and present converge in a chilling, uneasy and intense story that perfectly captures the foggy, secretive and dangerous atmosphere of a bleak London underworld. Ackroyd’s vivid prose style truly brings his settings to life, and pulls you into them. I was looking over my shoulder for weeks after reading it!”

 

Gabriele Willis

 Gabriele has written a number of novels set in and around Muskoka in Canada including The Summer of the Storm. She has chosen Shirley Jackson’s The Haunting of Hill House as her spooky book.

 

 

 I think that the two scariest books that I’ve ever read and liked – no gore – are “The Haunting of Hill House” by Shirley Jackson, and Stephen King’s “The Shining”. Both were read in the 1970s, so a long time ago, but some things just stay with you, don’t they? – even though on dark and lonely nights you wish they wouldn’t! Fortunately, my husband is not away on business trips much any more! The movies don’t do either book justice, especially the 1999 version of “The Haunting”, despite the big name stars (Liam Neeson, Catherine Zeta Jones). The 1963 version was much spookier, although I was only 13 when I saw it and it scared the hell out of me for years – had to sleep with my light on!

Anyway, Shirley Jackson was a good writer, and Stephen King can make a fire hose or a hedge seem like the most sinister thing. I read and liked his early books, but he lost me with “It”.

 

 

 So what do you think to this collection of spine-tinglers? Have you read any of these books? What did you think?

Dare you read them?



 

Next up is…….What’s spooking the book bloggers?



 

Dare you read it? Comes the Blind Fury by John Saul October 20, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Horror,John Saul,Paranormal,Spooky — The Book Whisperer @ 8:26 am
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The Blurb:

“A child cries out…in torment. In terror. From out of the past, from out of the mists, a terrible vengence is born.

Amanda: A century ago, a gentle blind girl walks the cliffs of Paradise Point. Then the children came, taunting, teasing – until she lost her footing, and fell, shrieking her rage down to the sea…

Michelle: Now Michelle has come from Boston to live in the big house  on Paradise Point. She is excited about her new life, ready to make new friends…until a hand reaches out from the swirling mists – the hand of a blind child. She is asking for friendship…seeking revenge…whispering her name…

(source: johnsaul.com)

What I thought:

I first read this book back in August 1986 (I remember it really clearly as my Grandparents had come over to look after me for a few days and I remember shutting myself away in my bedroom with a stack of John Saul novels and scaring myself silly). I had completely forgotten all about John Saul until I started my Dare you read it? series and was looking around for scary reads. I whooped when I came across his books and immdiatley swapped three of them on readitswapit.com.

Twenty-four years on, having reread Comes the Blind Fury, it didn’t have the same impact on me as it did as a teenager in terms of reading it from behind a cushion, but I still loved it and remembered just why I was such as fan of Sauls books back then.

The book starts with the death of a twelve year old blind girl, Amanda, in 1886. She is a kind and gentle girl who has been routinely teased and tormented by her class mates, and oneday that they go too far and put an object in her way on the cliff path, sending her free-falling into the sea. Amanda may be dead but she is not done yet…

One hundred years later, twelve-year-old Michelle moves with her family from Boston to Paradise Point to live in a big old Victorian house on the edge of the cliffs. When she picks her room, she finds an ancient doll at the back of the closet and names her Amanda.

Michelle quickly makes friends at school, and enjoys her new life, until one day at a picnic on the beach, things take an ugly turn when one of the group begins teasing her and Michelle runs off and tumbles down the side of the cliff. From then on she must use a cain to walk with the teasing becomes worse…until the fog comes out of nowhere and Michelle meets the ghost of Amanda who vows to help her get revenge…

This is a great book to keep you on the edge of your seat. I had forgotten just how great John Saul is able to do that. To be honest, I didn’t find this book scary this time around but it certainly had an eerie feel to it and it kept me on my toes.

I plan on reading more of his books soon too.

 

Spooky rating:

A great halloween read. Eerie and creepy. Read on a dark, cold night…but watch out for the fog drawing in….

 

 

 

 

Dare you read it? What is spooking the publishers? October 18, 2010

Filed under: Horror,Paranormal,Spooky — The Book Whisperer @ 8:01 am
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They publish and sell all those books we drool and salivate over, but what do those publishers and book-sellers read themselves? What books make them dive behind the cushions and peep at the pages through slatted fingers? Let’s find out…

 

 Andrea at Canongate

Andrea works at Canongate, a publishing house based in Edinburgh.

 

 

I’ve been recommending it to every bookish person I know – Legend of a Suicide by David Vann gets you right in the gut, it’s not a scary story but is truly shudder-inducing. Another book I would press into your hands is Let The Right One In by John Ajvide Lindqvist, one of the most atmospheric horror reads I’ve ever encountered.

 With a publisher’s hat on…
 
I’m Not Scared by Niccolo Ammaniti tells the story of Michele, a young Italian boy who stumbles on a great secret during a long, hot summer. It’s more a thriller than outright scary of spooky, but it’s perfect reading to contrast with monster books. I can’t not mention The Radleys by Matt Haig, who has a refreshing take on the vampire myth (they don’t sparkle). Next year we’re publishing The Last Werewolf by Glen Duncan (author of I, Lucifer), which is a monster book and a great literary werewolf romp! 

 

Kirsty at Oxford University Press

 

Kirsty works at Oxford University Press and looks after the marketing for the classics (OUC). She has recommended The Monk by Matthew Lewis.

 

 

 Can there be any more appropriate novel for Hallowe’en than Matthew Lewis’s gothic masterpiece, The Monk? It caused extraordinary controversy upon publication in the eighteenth century, because of both its graphic nature and the fact that its author was a sitting Member of Parliament, and still, I think, has the power to shock readers today.
The monk in question is revered for his piety until one day he is seduced by a young novice monk in his priory who reveals himself to actually be a girl. This leads to a catastrophic chain of events that involve rape, murder, torture, souls being sold to the Devil, and in one particularly memorable scene, a nun being torn to pieces in the street. It’s definitely not one for those with a weak disposition. Personally, I couldn’t put it down, even to the point of reading it under the desk during undergraduate lectures. Alongside Ann Radcliffe, Matthew Lewis has a deserved place  as a master of the traditional gothic genre, and anyone who can stand the gore will be rewarded with a real page-turner of a novel. Perhaps read it in the daytime though, eh?

 

 

Eliza at Haus Publishing

Eliza works at Haus Publishing which also publish Arabia Books.

 

 

 

Eliza has chosen The Final Bet by Abdelilah Hamdouchi for the scary book published by her own company:

Othman, a handsome young Moroccan man, returns home to discover his elderly French wife, Sofia, brutally murdered in their bedroom. Othman is educated but unemployed, and had been in desperate circumstancs before meeting Sofia, who pampered him with fancy cars, expensive clothes, and access to her mansion in the most exclusive neighbourhood in Casablanca. But he found living with a woman more than forty years his senior too much for him — before his wife’s murder he sought relief in a steamy affair with an attractive young aerobics instructor, Naeema. The police quickly suspect Othman as the prime culprit in his wife’s murder. But is he guilty? Did he kill his wife for the money and his lover? Or is he an innocent man, framed by circumstance and at the mercy of an overzealous and brutal police force?

 

Meike at Peirene Press

 
Meike works at Peirene Press, based in London, and they publish translated short books from around Europe.
 
 
 
My tip for a perfect Halloween read: Anne Rice’s Mayfair Witches Trilogy. It’s been a few years since I’ve read them but I vividly remember finishing the first book of the series on a plane. I just didn’t’ want to leave my seat because I was desperate to finish the book, so gripped by it that I couldn’t even think of walking & reading at the same time (which I otherwise often do).
 
 
 

Frances at Vintage

 
Frances is the Editor at Vintage.
 
 
 
 
 
Frances has chosen Dracula as her spooky read and she says “It is the grandfather of literary vampires, Bram Stoker’s Dracula is more sinister, more powerful and more implacably evil than you could imagine. The perfect Hallowe’en treat, this novel still chills, thrills and enthrals until it’s last page”
 
Check out the fabby new cover too!
 
 

Sarah at Book Rabbit

 

Sarah works at Book Rabbit, an social website for book
 lovers.
 
 

 

We’ve been eagerly awaiting  Dark Matter: A Ghost Story, this first adult ghost story from Michelle Paver who has had huge success with her Chronicles of Ancient Darkness YA series.
It’s the perfect Halloween read because it has that subtle, unsettling quality similar to Henry James’ ‘Turn of the Screw’, nothing is predictable and you can’t let your guard down.
The setting is quite literally, chilling, as the story follows a group of hopeful young Englishmen who set off on an Arctic expedition, only to find something sinister lurking in the snow. As one-by-one men drop out of the expedition, the main character, Jack, is left alone in the unending darkness and harrowing, bleak conditions to face his worst fears. The writing is superb and the plot and tension builds to a terrifying climax. This is a dark and disturbing ghost story, full of menace and utterly compelling. We were suitably shaken.

 

 
 
 
What do you think to the publishers choices? Have you read any of these?
 

If not………dare you?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Next up……What’s spooking our favourite authors? 
 
 
 
 
 

Dare you read it? The Phantom Coach October 16, 2010

Filed under: Paranormal,Spooky,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 7:43 am
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The Phantom Coach by Amelia B Edwards

What a fantastically spooky title. Amelia Blandford Edwards was a Victorian author, journalist, lady traveller and Egyptologist but her novels from the 1850′s & 60′s, although popular at the time, seem to have disappeared since. This short ghost story, however, has lived on.

The Phantom Coach is about a young, newly married lawyer who gets lost on a cold winter evening on the moors in the north east of England.

 

“It was not a pleasant place in which to loose ones way, with the first feathery flakes of a coming snowstorm just fluttering down upon the heather and the leaden evening closing in all around.”

 

Just as James Murray starts to get very cold and frightened, for he had promised his new bride that he would be home for supper, he sees a lantern across the moor and finds himself in a large house, being fed and watered by a strange man who tells him that he can catch a mail coach back to his home village just 5 miles from there. James sets out, after being told to wait for the coach at a certain point in the wall where several years ago, a coach with its horses and four passengers on board, ploughed off the road never to be seen again…….

 

Spooky rating:

 Old-fashioned spooky. Those who scare easy still welcome….

 

 

 

Mummy Whisperer reviews: The Tenth Gift by Jane Johnson October 14, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Globe Trotting,Historical,Jane Johnson,Morocco — The Book Whisperer @ 12:30 pm
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This is the second of Mummy Whisperer’s reviews.

The Blurb:

“On a Sunday morning in July 1625, Barbary pirates sail into a quiet Cornish bay and storm the church. Their loot: sixty men, women and children, kidnapped and bound for northern Morocco, where they are to be sold in the thronging slave market of the Souq el Ghezel.

Amongst them is Catherine Anne Tregenna, a talented young embroiderer. But as her diary reveals, Cat is anything but the subservient and compliant slave that her captors were expecting – and as the coast of England fades from sight, adventure beckons in the East …

In an exclusive London restaurant, a gift is given that will change Julia Lovat’s life. The antique book of Jacobean embroidery delights her, but when she settles down to read it more closely, she unexpectedly discovers within its foxed and faded pages the extraordinary diary of a young Cornish girl, calling to her from across the centuries…

The stories of these two women are destined to converge in an extraordinary and haunting manner.”

 

  What Mummy Whisperer thought:

This is another book based on historical fact. Yes, I really love my history! I had already read White Gold by Giles Milton, a non-fiction book, so I knew about pirate corsairs from Morocco taking white slaves from Cornwall by force back to north Africa. The author, Jane Johnson, was in Morocco researching the story of a distant ancestor kidnapped by Barbary prirates when the idea for this novel came to her.

The Tenth Gift is the story of two young women. Cat Trepenne, a servant in the 17th century household of Lady Harris of Kenegie, Cornwall, and Julia Lovatt living in the present day whi is given a book “The Needlewoman’s Glorie” as a bitter-sweet parting gift from her lover. The Needlewoman’s Glorie containing diary entries written on each page had been the propery of Cat Trepenne which she had on her when she was captured. Julia’s quest is to uncover the story of Cat takes her on a journey to Morocco.

I really enjoyed this book although the first part was a bit slow. But once the author started describing the raid on Cornwall, the subsequent journey and life of the white slaves in Morocco and Julia’s quest, her research and enthusiasm came to life. The book was an interesting and colourful, exciting read based on well researched material and the author’s own life – she is now married to a Moroccon!

 

 Have you read this book? Can you recommend any others about this period or set in Morocco?

 

 

Dare you read it?: Her Fearful Symmetry by Audrey Niffenegger October 12, 2010

Filed under: Audrey Niffenegger,Authors,Paranormal,Spooky — The Book Whisperer @ 5:08 pm
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I read this book about a year ago. While I didn’t find it at all scary, it definitely had a certain spooky feel to it. The book contains ghosts (of a human and also of a kitten!) and because it is set in and around Highgate Cemetary, there is a layer of tension that settles over the book, almost like a fine mist, which makes it a great atmospheric read.

 

  Her Fearful Symmetry by Audrey Niffenegger

The Blurb:

“Julia and Valentina Poole are normal American teenagers – normal, at least, for identical ‘mirror’ twins who have no interest in college or jobs or possibly anything outside their cozy suburban home. But everything changes when they receive notice that an aunt whom they didn’t know existed has died and left them her flat in an apartment block overlooking Highgate Cemetery in London. They feel that at last their own lives can begin …but have no idea that they’ve been summoned into a tangle of fraying lives, from the obsessive-compulsive crossword setter who lives above them to their aunt’s mysterious and elusive lover who lives below them, and even to their aunt herself, who never got over her estrangement from the twins’ mother – and who can’t even seem to quite leave her flat…With Highgate Cemetery itself a character and echoes of Henry James and Charles Dickens, “Her Fearful Symmetry” is a delicious and deadly twenty-first-century ghost story about Niffenegger’s familiar themes of love, loss and identity. It is certain to cement her standing as one of the most singular and remarkable novelists of our time.”

(source: Amazon.com)

  What I thought:

Throw a huge cemetery, a cold & wintery London, bizzare mirror twins, a ferrel kitten and a recntly dead Aunt into a pot together and the result is a wonderfully quirky, melancholoy, spooky book.

The story is set around Highgate Cemetery in London where a recently dead Elspeth has left her appartment to her twenty year old American nieces, Julia and Valentina, who are mirror twins. When the twins arrive in their new home they soon learn that they are not alone as it appears their Aunt Elspeth has never left. While it’s sometimes difficult to know who to root for in this book, there is a wonderful cast of both primary and secondary characters that kept me glued to the story and there is a sense of such powerful emotions that they almost feel tangible: The twins new neighbour, Robert, was their Aunt’s lover and his feelings of loss for Elspeth are painful to read at times. I felt completely absorbed in this book and I have to admit that I never saw what happened in the last 50 pages coming at all!

It is ultimately a book about love, loss and betrayal with a gothic backdrop of ghosts, cemetaries and enough twists and turns that you never feel completley comfortable.

Spooky rating:

Mild spookiness. Unless you have a particularly weak heart, you should be OK with this one.

 

Dare you read it?: Naomi’s Room by Jonathan Aycliffe October 10, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Horror,Jonathan Aycliffe,Paranormal,Spooky,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 5:59 pm
Tags: ,

The Blurb:

“Not long after his daughter Naomi is abducted and then found murdered in a field, Charles Hillenbrand begins hearing sinister whispers in the night, and he soon tries to uncover the truth behind his daughter’s demise.”

(source: Goodreads.com)

What I thought:

The really weird thing about this book is that I picked it up for a few pence in a second hand bookshop about 18 months ago; I had no desire to read any horror books at the time and when I got home I remember wondering what had possessed me to get it as I thought I might find it too scary to read. When I started on my Dare You Read This? challenge I took it off my shelf and dusted it down – and I swear I kept getting déjà vu while I read it (just little snippets that would make me shiver and convinced I’d read  it before but I really don’t think I have). Spooooooky!

The book is a ghost story that starts off with the abduction of a four year old girl, Naomi, from a busy toy shop in London on Christmas Eve in 1970. Her father, Charles Hillenbrand gets separated from her in the shop and she is never seen again. By the afternoon of Christmas Day Naomi’s body has been found – she has been murdered.

While trying to cope with their grief and come to terms without their little girl, back in Cambridge, Charles and Laura find themselves on the receiving end of some very strange events. They are woken one night by a piercing scream coming from Naomi’s room, and they hear footsteps in the attic above their bedroom. The mystery and nightmare only deepens when a photographer who has been camped outside their house waiting for glimpses of the grieving parents has his role of film developed and finds strange faces that appear at the attic window and two little girls dressed in Victorian clothing in the garden where he was sure there was nobody there. Together, Charles and the journalist, David Lewis, try to work out what’s going on……but nobody could predict what more was to come!

This is a really spooky tale of things that go bump in the night, ghosts who have had a particularly gruemsome end to their earthly lives and are trying to communicate, and the ending is pretty shocking – and totally unexpected!

This book is now out of print, unfortunatley, but there are still copies around on the web (to buy or swap). I have just ordered myself a couple of his other books for some more ghostly goings on. I really enjoyed this book.

  Read it if you dare!

 

 

Spooky rating:

 A good spooky yarn – scary and shocking

In the middle of reading this book I was taking a shower (not with the actual book, obviously!) and I swear I saw something brown flash across my mirror just outside the shower door on the bathroom wall – it was only there for a fleeting second – but then I realised it was probably just my arm or something so I started waving my arms around to prove my own point. I couldn’t see them in the mirror – the angle was wrong!……

Recommended for sitting in a dark room with just your reading lamp on and a cup of hot chocolate.

 

Mwahahahahahaha!

 

 

Dare you read it? The Litte Stranger by Sarah Waters October 7, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,Paranormal,Sarah Waters,Spooky — The Book Whisperer @ 8:10 pm
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I read this book about six months ago but I just had to include it in the Dare You Read It? series as it is about a ghost (or is it?). There was one part, about half way through, that I was reading alone one night after Mr Whisperer had gone to sleep and I was convinced I could hear tapping on the window – it terrified the life out of me!

 

  The Little Stranger by Sarah  Waters

The Blurb:

 “In a dusty post-war summer in rural Warwickshire, a doctor is called to a patient at Hundreds Hall. Home to the Ayres family for over two centuries, the Georgian house, once grand and handsome, is now in decline, its masonry crumbling, its gardens choked with weeds, the clock in its stable yard permanently fixed at twenty to nine. But are the Ayreses haunted by something more sinister than a dying way of life?
Little does Dr Faraday know how closely, and how terrifyingly, their story is about to become entwined with his. Prepare yourself. From this wonderful writer who continues to astonish us, now comes a chilling ghost story.”

  What I thought:

The story is narrated by Dr Faraday, the local village Doctor, in 1940′s rural England. He is called to Hundreds Hall, a huge mansion with acres of land where his Mother was a nursery nurse when he was a boy and he remembers, fondly, the extravagent tea parties and fetes that the Ayres family used to throw for the village. When Dr Farady arrives at the house after not having seen it for decades he is shocked at the crumbling and delapidated state that it’s in. The owners of the property are now Mrs Ayres and her two children, Caroline and Roderick (both in their twenties); her eldest child, Susan, died 30 years ago aged nine. Faraday has been called to see the maid, Betty, who is complaining of stomach problems and saying that she wants to go home, but when Farady delves deeper he finds out that it is because she is hearing strange things in the house and she is scared. Farady is invited to have tea with the family and this is the start of a friendship with the family just at a time when things start going bump in the night……

Despite casulaties of the spooky goings on a-plenty, Faraday managed to find an explanation for everything: the fires, the writing on the walls, the tapping etc. What frustrated me was that while this was going on I was expecting things to start falling into place and make sense, but it never did. I am no more clued up now that I was when I started it. What I think Waters has done is left readers to make up their own minds about what was going on in the house. Where there really ghosts or was the family in melt-down as well as the house? The book is set in post WWII England, on the eve of the NHS, when class is becoming less important and the upstanding members of the community aren’t necessarily only those with wealth anymore: Mrs Ayres still likes Betty the maid to dress in full black and white and courtsey etc which is even starting to be amusing to members of her own circle. With the going’s on in the house, we are left to wonder whether their really is the pitter-patter of little ghosty feet or whether the demise of the house is mirroring the demise of its occupants?

I would definitely recommend this book as a really good read. I was reading late one night and put the book down just after an episode of tapping on the walls and was drifting to sleep when I swear I was woken up by tapping on my bedroom window! It could have been a dream, but hey……..you never know!

 

Spooky rating:

Although this book wasn’t actually scary per se, the ghostly goings on in the middle gave me the chills while I was up reading late one night.

Good spooky parts but the book won’t turn your hair grey with fright.

 

 

Boof’s Blah Blah Blah’s October 3, 2010

Filed under: Uncategorized — The Book Whisperer @ 11:17 am
Tags: ,

A reading hiatus?

I creatinly hope not! I start my new job tomorrow, and while I am genuinely really looking forward to it, part of me is worrying about how it will affect my reading this month. For the first three weeks I am on an induction and training course away from home so I’m going to be really busy during the day and knackered in the evening. I do hope that I get some chilling time to cosy up with my books though, especially as I have some seriously spooky ones to take with me – reading them alone in a hotel should highten the scariness…..mwahahahaha!

  Dare you read it?

I kicked off my Dare you read it? series a few days ago, where I plan to make October a month of reading spooky and scary books. I have already read a few – reviews coming up soon – and I also have loads more to choose from. I won’t get them all read but I would like to at least read some of the following:

The Monk by Matthew Lewis, Gothic Tales by Elizabeth Gaskell, Jamaica Inn by Daphne du Maurier, Seance by John Harwood, Ghost Writer by John Harwood, Comes the Blind Fury by John Saul, The Woman in Black by Susan Hill, The Turn of the Screw by Henry James.

 

 

A little ambitious to think I may get through them all, but I’ll have a good go at cracking the spines of as many as possible.

Have you read any of these?

  It’s raining books

Of course, choosing my reading for this month has meant that I have absolutely HAD to buy books!  ;)

 

 

 

These books are a mixutre of bought, swapped and sent by publishers / authors. I would like to say thank you to Haus Publishing, Vintage, Amazon Vine and author Rosy Thornton for sending me their books – I look forward to reading them all.

What I got:

The Caligraphers Secret by Rafik Schami (sent my the publisher)

The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova (swapped)

The Redeemer by Jo Nesbo (cannot wait for my next Nesbo fix!)

Dracula The Undead by Dacre Stoker (the official sequel apparantly)

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley (bought to read this month)

Warm Bodies byIsaac Marion (sent by Vintage – looks great!)

The Tiger by John Vaillant (sent by Amazon Vine)

Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves by P G Wodehouse (swapped – this will be my first Wodehouse and really looking forward to it)

The Tapestry of Love by Rosy Thornton (sent by the author – looks like a wonderfully gentle read that I will probably be craving after this month!)

Comes the Bind Fury by John Saul (swapped – I read this about 23 years ago and I’m rereading it for my scary book month)

Weep No More My Lady by Mary Higgins Clark (bought these next three at a second hand shop for my Queen of Suspense challenge – love MHC!)

Stillwatch by Mary Higgins Clark

A Stranger is Watching by Mary Higgins Clark

 

  Wot…..no books?

 

(Hahahahaha…….do you remeber the Wot…no? thingy. If you were around in the 80′s you probably will).

Anyway, I have a complaint to make! Why is it that none of my family or friends ever buy me books? True, I buy them for myself and true, I receive them from publishers and authors, but still…..

 It’s my birthday this coming Saturday and I am utterly unable to persuade anyone I know that what I actually want as a present is more books! I get reactions ranging from raised eyebrows right through to belly-laughter. People appear incapable of believing that yes, what I want ( ♪  what I really really want ♪ ) is more books! Gah!!!

Does anyone else have this problem? :(

 

  Have a great week everyone. Happy reading :)

 

 

 
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