The Book Whisperer

jottings, musings and recommendations of an incurable bookaholic

Book Review: Daddy’s Little Girls by Mary Higgins Clark September 18, 2010

The Blurb

“At just seven years old, Ellie Cavanaugh lost her sister Andrea to a brutal murderer. It was her testimony that put Robson Westerfield away, but now, twenty-two years on, he is about to be released. Ellie, now a writer and investigative reporter, senses trouble and travels to her hometown just as Westerfield arrives and begins a campaign to prove his innocence. Ellie still suspects him, as does her estranged father, and both are determined to thwart his attempts. But someone has other ideas…Someone who is picking up where Westerfield left off, commiting other dangerous acts that send Ellie spiralling into a whirlwind of secrets, lies and deceit. Can she uncover the truth before a desperate killer sets his sights on her? As events reach a head, Ellie realises she might be the only person who can seek vengenance for the past…”

(source: Amazon.com)

What I thought

I love Mary Higgins Clark! You know that – I rave about her every chance I get :)

In Daddy’s Little Girl, the book is narrated by Ellie Kavanagh who, as a 7 year old, found her sister Andrea’s murdered body in a hide-out in a neighbouring property. Twenty-two years later, Andrea’s convicted killer (her boyfriend Rob Westerfield) is about to be let out of prison based on some fresh evidence that casts doubt on his guilt and Ellie is determined that he should be put back behind bars. As Ellie hunts for clues and new witnesses that will prove what she always believed – that Rob did kill Andrea – she finds her own life in danger the deeper she delves.

I have to admit, that despite still loving this book (I love all her books) this is probably my least favourite out of all the ones I have read – about 13 or 14, I believe. I can’t really put my finger on why although if I was to take a guess it would be that it was pretty obvious who the murderer was right from the start, despite several attempted red herrings. There wasn’t much guess work or suspense involved. Having said that, as Ellie uncovers more and more evidence the plot picks up real pace and there are the usual cliffhangers and race-against-time’s that are the blueprint to MHC’s novels.

In summary, I really enjoyed this – as I do all her books – but it just wasn’t one of my favourites.

 

I read this book as part of the Queen of Suspence hosted at Tea Time with Marce (2/6)

and also as part of the R.I.P. V challenge (2/4)

 

 

 

Book Review: Pictures of Lily by Paige Toon September 9, 2010

Filed under: Chick Lit,Comfort Reading,Paige Toon — The Book Whisperer @ 8:32 pm

The Blurb:

“‘Will you marry me?’ I think of you, then. I think of you every day. But usually in the quietest part of the morning, or the darkest part of the night. Not when my boyfriend of two years has just proposed. I look up at Richard with his hopeful eyes. ‘Lily?’ he prompts. It’s been ten years, but it feels like only yesterday that you left. How can I say yes to Richard with all my heart when most of it has always belonged to you? I take a deep breath and will myself to speak…Ten years ago when Lily was just sixteen, she fell in love with someone she really shouldn’t have fallen in love with. Now, living in Sydney and engaged to another man, she can’t forget the one that got away. Then her past comes back to haunt her, and she has to make a decision that will break her heart – and the heart of at least one of the men who love her.”

(source: Amazon)

What I thought:

This is the first of my recent holiday reads – the perfect book for chilling round the pool with.

Pictures of Lily is a book in two parts, the first of these set 10 years ago when 16 year old Lily is dragged reluctantly to Adelaide in Australia with her mum who has met someone on the internet. Lily has no intention of trying to settle in until she goes to do some voluntary work at the local animal sanctuary where her mum’s boyfriend works. Lily loves animals and soon finds herself head over heels with both the animals and also the rather hunky Ben who also works there; the only snag is that he is 28 and about to get married.

Fast forward ten years, Lily is living in Sidney with her boyfriend Richard, and he has just proposed to her. Depsite being happy and Richard being wonderful, she has never quite got over Ben, the first love of her life and when she suddently finds him in her life again, Lily has a big decision to make.

Paige Toon is the reason I fell in love with chicklit a few years ago. I used to be a bit of a snob when it came to anything with a pastel cover and would wrinkle my nose at anything on a supermarket shelf. I honestly don’t even know what made me pick up Toon’s debut book Lucy in the Sky, but something compelled me to buy it and, despite my reservations, I loved it! That was the book that started my love affair with chicklit and I am now LOUD AND PROUD! ;) You honestly can’t beat some feel-good fluff when your brain is yelling for a respite from literary fiction; it’s such a tonic.

What I loved about Pictures of Lily was that some of the characters from Lucy in the Sky turned up in this too and it was lovely to catch up with them. And there was a definite “awww” factor at the end of this one.

 

Do you read any chicklit? If not, why not? I’m curious as I was a self-confessed snob and now I am converted.

(I recieved my copy of this book from Simon and Scuster – Thanks Ally!)

 

 

Meet the Author: Elly Griffiths August 12, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Comfort Reading,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,Elly Griffiths — The Book Whisperer @ 11:09 am

Elly Griffiths

Meet Elly Griffiths:

Elly Griffiths writes a series of crime fiction novels with a difference – rather than the protagonist being a Detective or amateur sleuth, Ruth Galloway is a Forensic Archaeologist who lives in the saltmarshes on the north Norfolk coast. Her debut novel and first book in the series, The Crossing Places, was reviewed by me yesterday.

Elly’s Ruth Galloway novels take for their inspiration Elly’s husband, who gave up a city job to train as an archaeologist, and her aunt who lives on the Norfolk coast and who filled her niece’s head with the myths and legends of that area.  Elly has two children and lives near Brighton.

 

A big welcome to Elly:

Boof: Congratulations on being shortlisted for the Theakston’s Crime Fiction Awards this year. This was your debut novel and you were up against some of the heavy-weights of crime fiction like Ian Rankin and Peter James to name just two. How did you react when you found out you had been nominated?

 Elly: I was just amazed. To think that I was on the shortlist with such giants of the crime-writing world – it still doesn’t seem real. I was star-struck the whole time at Harrogate. When Reginald Hill asked me what my book was about, all I could say was ‘Norfolk.’

 

Boof: The heroine of the series, Ruth Galloway, is in her late 30’s who loves solitude, cats, is slightly over-weight and orders lots of books from Amazon (a girl after my own heart!). How did you come up with her?

Elly: I really don’t know how I came up with Ruth. She just appeared in my head fully formed. Maybe there are some elements in Ruth of my two sisters and one of my oldest friends – all strong, independent women- and maybe there’s a little of me. Like Ruth I struggle with my weight, I love cats and reading – and Bruce Springsteen! 

The Crossing Places

Boof: Ruth is an archaeologist and this is how she helps the police with solving a crime. What research did you need to do about archaeology for the books?

Elly: My husband’s an archaeologist and he helps me a lot with the technical stuff. He has also introduced me to a colleague who’s a forensic archaeologist. She actually does work with the police so she’s has given me some invaluable insights.

 

Boof: Your series of books are set in Norfolk on the English east coast: what made you decide to set the books here?

Elly: My aunt lives in Norfolk and, when I was a child, we used to spend holidays there. Now I go there with my children. I just love the space and the loneliness and the sense of history. The North Norfolk coast is very beautiful and also slightly spooky. 

north Norfolk coastline

Boof: The second book in the series, The Janus Stone, has just come out in paperback and there is a third book due out in January 2011. How many more do you plan to write in this series?

Elly: I’m currently writing Book 4 and I’ve got ideas for at least three more. That’s the great thing about archeology – and Norfolk. There are so many eras to choose from. The Crossing Places starts with Iron Age remains, The Janus Stone involves a Roman excavation, the new book, The House At Sea’s End, is about bones from the Second World War. I’ve got ideas for books about Aborigine skulls, Victorian graveyards, medieval plague pits…

The Janus Stone

 

Boof: Can you give us any sneak previews of what we might expect in future books? (I’m particularly interested to see what, if anything, develops between Ruth and Detective Harry Nelson)

Elly: I’m not sure myself what will happen to Ruth and Nelson in the end but, in the next few books, their relationship just gets more complicated.

 

Boof: Who are your favourite crime fiction authors?

Elly: I love C J Sansom, Ian Rankin and Reginald Hill (still can’t believe I spoke to Reginald Hill!). But my favourite British crime writer has to be the first – Wilkie Collins.

[Boof: Yay! I love Wilkie Collins!]

 

Boof: Who are your favourite crime fiction characters from other books? Did Ruth or Harry end up with any of the characteristics of any of them?

 Elly: Count Fosco in The Woman in White is my favourite literary character of all time. I love the way that, though he’s a thorough villain, he’s not quite all bad. I hope that my characters are not black and white but shades of grey….

 

The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins

Boof: What jobs did you do before you started writing and how did you make the transition to being an author?

Elly: I used to work in publishing. I was an editor in one of the big companies. You’d think that this would be the perfect job for an aspiring writer but fifteen years in publishing almost killed off any desire to write. I didn’t start to write seriously until I left publishing.

 

Boof: Where is your favourite / most productive place to write?

Elly: I write in a room that I call the study but, unfortunately, the kids think it’s the place where they watch TV and play on the Playstation.

 

Boof: Have you ever read a book and thought “damn, I wish I’d written that!”

Elly: I don’t think so though one of the things that motivated me to finish The Crossing Places was the thought that someone else would write a book about a forensic archaeologist.

 

Boof: If you were to be stranded on a desert island on a year and you were only allowed to take 3 books with you, which ones would you choose?

Elly: The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins, The Mating Season by P G Wodehouse, Nice Work by David Lodge

 

Boof: What is your literary ambition?

Elly: I’d love to write a really long book like The Moonstone or The Woman in White. And I’d love to be serialized on Radio 4.

 

Boof: Finally, the quick fire round:

Favourite colour: Red

Favourite animal: Horse

Favourite food: Pasta

Favourite song: Thunder Road by Bruce Springsteen

Favourite author (non-crime): David Lodge

Favourite holiday destination: Italy

Favourite childhood memory: Going to Seven Sisters beach with my family and a whole group of friends, walking for miles over the sand and finally swimming in the sea.

 Thank you so much to Elly for agreeing to be interviewed on The Book Whisperer. The Crossing Places is a great book and I am really looking forward to reading the others in the series.

 

 

Book Review: Mini Shopaholic by Sophie Kinsella August 5, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Chick Lit,Comfort Reading,Laugh Out Loud,Sophie Kinsella,Summer Reads — The Book Whisperer @ 9:23 am

The Blurb:

 ”Becky Brandon (née Bloomwood) thought motherhood would be a breeze and that having a daughter was a dream come true a shopping friend for life!

But it s trickier than she thought two-year-old Minnie has a quite different approach to shopping. She can create havoc everywhere from Harrods to Harvey Nicks to her own christening. She hires taxis at random, her favourite word is Mine , and she s even started bidding for designer bags on ebay.

On top of everything else, there s a big financial crisis. People are having to Cut Back including all of Becky s personal shopping clients and she and Luke are still living with Becky s Mum and Dad. To cheer everyone up, Becky decides to throw a surprise birthday party on a budget but then things become really complicated.

Who will end up on the naughty step, who will get a gold star and will Becky s secret wishes come true?”

(source: Amazon)

 

What I thought:

She’s ba-aack! And this time she has a mini-me in tow. My very favourite Calamity-Jane, Becky Brandon (née Bloomwood), is double trouble in this latest giggle-fest as hanging on to her Gucci coat tails is two year old Minnie, who comes complete with her own very finely tuned shopping instincts.

I have been literally chomping at the bit since I found out that this book was coming out. I am a HUGE Sophie Kinsella fan – she is one of my favourite authors, chicklit or otherwise, as every single one of her books (and I’ve read them all) make me laugh out loud and they are the ultimate tonic for me. I knew this book wouldn’t deviate from my expectations and I was right.

 Mini Shopaholic starts, as you might expect, in a shopping mall where young Minnie is wrestling with Becky over a toy pony that she just has to have! Becky is trying to look like the responsible parent in public and tries reasoning with a increasinly loud Minnie. When this doesn’t appear to have any affect, and Becky also realises that the pony is, in fact, gorgeous and Minnie really should have one, she devises a pocket money plan for Minnie whereby she will get 50p per week and as she will be backdating this to the day of her birth, she can afford to buy the pony now! Result!

This is only the beginning and what ensues is a cab-hailing Minnie with instructions to drive to Starbucks, the arrival of a nanny who quits after just one day, a TV personality called Nanny Sue who accompanies Becky and Minnie to a play area (which gets quickly forgotten when the cab pulls up at lights right outside a brand new shopping mall where every visitor gets a gift). In the middle of trying to assure Nanny Sue and the rest of the world that she can cope, Becky is also trying to arrange a surprise birthday party for Luke which just screams disaster from the start, especially while she has to deal with trying to prevent Minnie from bidding for designer shoes on ebay!

I just loved this book. Becky had me in stitches and hiding behind pillows cringing at the mess she gets herself into, in equal measures. If you’ve read the others in the series (and if not, why not?) then you MUST read this one – it’s hillarious, sweet and feel-good and I am already excited that the next book in the series has been nicely lined up at the end of this one (and when you read it and see why at the end, you just know you’re in for a real treat).

 

Here are my reviews of all the other books in the Shopaholic series and here are my reviews of Kinsella’s stand-alone books.

 

Have you read any of Sophie Kinsella’s books? What did you think? Are you looking forward to Mini Shopahoic coming out?

 

(I received my copy of this book for review from Bantam Press – thank you!)

 

 

 

Who fancies a little nosey at my bookshelves? July 30, 2010

Welcome to my crib

I thought I’d take you on a little tour of my lovely books and their homes. I recently bought two new bookscases as Mr Whisperer was getting fed up of seeing toppling piles of books at every corner and books behind books behind books on my creaking shelves. 

Up the stairs and two huge bookshelves greet me at the top

These are the two new ones which had to go at the top of the stairs as there isn’t enough room anywhere else. It’s a good job we have the house on the market as we’re running out of room. This view is coming up the staircase. 

Ta daaaaaa!

And here are the bookcases themselves. I had hours of fun piling, sorting and re-sorting my books onto these. They may look like randomly placed books but believe me, they make perfect sense to me. 

Choices, choices….

These are my two shelves full of books that have been sent to me by publishers and authors that haven’t been read yet. Actually, these photos were taken a couple of weeks ago so there is more to add. I hesitated about including this photo in case publishers think I have enough and don’t send me any more so here’s a little caviat…”There is no such thing as too many books! What doesn’t get read today may well get read tomorrow so keep ‘em coming!” :)  

My review copies.......all screaming for attention!

I heart Richard Parker

Check it! *flicks fingers* 

Ever since reading Life of Pi I have become obsessed with tigers hence my collection of lovelies on top of the two book cases in my office.  

The three bottom shelves on the left-hand case are all books I have on readitswapit.com where I get loads of my books from. I only swap out the ones I don’t want to keep (i.e. haven’t enjoyed, have enjoyed but won’t re-read etc). I have had some great swaps on that site. 

Bookcases in my office & my beloved Richard Parkers!

Books and a Turkish wall-hanging

  This was my original bookcase from when I lived in a one-bedroom flat years ago and didn’t have any more room. Now it lives in the hallway under my gorgeous wall-hanging from Turkey and an orchid from my parents-in-law. 

Bookcase in the hall

Pride of place

Some of my faves on display

These are the books that are in my living room and I expect guests to gasp and coo at (frankly, if they don’t they’re not welcome in my house anyway. Tsk.) These are some of my favourite ever books: classics like Jane Eyre, The Woman in White and East Lynne on there and also some of my faves like The Secret History, The Magus, Wild Swans, Five Quarters of the Orange, Memoirs of a Geisha, Girl with a Pearl Earring etc and others that are just downright good reads like We Need to Talk About Kevin, Behind the Scenes at the Museum, The Time Travelers Wife etc etc.

 

Did you enjoy your tour of Chez Whisperer?

 

 

Book Review: The Likeness by Tana French July 19, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Comfort Reading,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,Tana French — The Book Whisperer @ 5:11 pm

The Blurb:

“‘I knew her from somewhere, I’d seen that face a million times before. Then the whole world went silent, frozen, darkness roaring in from the edges and only the girl’s face blazing white at the centre; because it was me, blue-lipped and still, with shadows like dark bruises under my eyes.’

Still traumatised by her brush with a psychopath, Detective Cassie Maddox transfers out of the Murder squad and starts a relationship with fellow detective Sam O’Neill. When he calls her to the scene of his new case, she is shocked to find that the murdered girl is her double. What’s more, her ID shows she is Lexie Madison – the identity Cassie used, years ago, as an undercover detective.

With no leads, no suspects and no clues to Lexie’s real identity, Cassie’s old boss spots the opportunity of a lifetime: send Cassie undercover in her place, to tempt the killer out of hiding to finish the job.”

 

What I thought:

When several people whom I know and like and have similar taste in books to me start raving about a book, it is never long before I make it my mission to get my paws on a copy and that’s exactly what happened with The Likeness. Once I had my squeeky new copy at home, I thought I’d just have a flick through the first few pages and before I knew it I had read all 700 pages in 3 days. It is one of my favourite reads this year!

The story is narrated by Cassie Maddox, a Detective in Dublin’s Domestic Violence Unit. She is called out to the scene of a crime in a derelict cottage in the countryside early one morning where a young lady has been stabbed to death. It doesn’t take Cassie long to work out why she, personally, has been summoned – the dead girl is the spitting image of herself. Not only that, but the girl is ID’d as one Lexie Maddison which is the invented name that Cassie had been given several years ago on an undercover job. The girl, by the looks of all the evidence that is presented to the team, has been living as Lexie Maddison for the last 3 years in Dublin and nobody knows where she came from or who she really is.

Lexie had been living in an old manor house in the village where she was found for just 6 months with 4 of her student friends (one of whom had inherited the house from his deceased uncle). After considerable prersuasion Casssie agrees to become part of a plan to infiltrate the manor house and out the killer. By telling the 4 house-mates that Lexie didn’t die that night, Cassie then spends the next week preparing for her new role by watching videos of the 5 housemates together, learning all about Lexie’s life, mannerisms, and her friends and then she is ready to step into her new life…….

I was on the edge of my seat wondering if Cassie could pull it off and if one of the housemates had anything to do with her death or whether it is someone from Lexie’s unknown past come back to find her, or even someone thinking that they had murdered the original Lexie (from Cassie’s undercover role). One thing is for sure though: the housemates are hiding something.

I just loved this book, I found that I couldn’t and put it down, nor did I want to. Despite the size of the book, I never once felt like it was too long; on the contrary I could have gone on reading for several hundred more. I became like Cassie – so engrossed in Lexie’s life that I felt like I knew the housemates and was living there with them. I love a god thriller, but this felt like more than that to me – it is a pyschoogical thriller and even had shades of The Secret History by Donna Tartt  (which is one of my all-time favourite books) or Red Leaves by Paulina Simons (another great college thriller).

The characters in this book are brilliantly drawn: Detective Frank Mackey (Cassie’s undercover boss) is perfect for his role (and I have heard that French’s next book Faithful Place will be narrated by him which I am excited about) as are the characters of the housemates (posh, lying around listening to classical music and reading 18th century poets for relaxation).

This book has turned out to be one of my absolute favourites of the year so far and I intend to dive into In The Woods (the first book) and Faithful Place very soon. If Tana French grabs my attention in these books as much as she has done in The Likeness then she is on her way to becoming one of my favourite authors!

 

Have you read it yet? Are you going to?

 

 

 

Book Review: The Lagacy by Katherine Webb July 12, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Comfort Reading,Katherine Webb,Summer Reads — The Book Whisperer @ 11:04 am

The Blurb:

“In the depths of a harsh winter, following the death of their grandmother, Erica Calcott and her sister Beth return to Storton Manor, a grand and imposing Wiltshire house where they spent their summer holidays as children. When Erica begins to sort through her grandmother’s belongings, she is flooded with memories of her childhood – and of her cousin, Henry, whose disappearance from the manor tore the family apart. Erica sets out to discover what happened to Henry, so that the past can be laid to rest, and her sister, Beth, might finally find some peace. Gradually, as Erica begins to sift through remnants of the past, a secret family history emerges; one that stretches all the way back to turn-of-the-century America, to a beautiful society heiress and a haunting, savage land. As past and present converge, Erica and Beth must come to terms with two terrible acts of betrayal – and the heart-breaking legacy left behind. THE LEGACY is an unforgettable, deeply satisfying story that will stay with you long after the last page has been turned.”

What I thought:

This book is the third book for discussion on TV Book Club and the show was aired last night. After finishing this book I couldn’t wait to hear what the panel and others thought and I am delighted to report that they all felt the same way as me: they loved it!

The Legacy opens in 1905 with Caroline Calcott, Lady of Stourton Manor in Wiltshire, hurredly leaving the house and making her way through the grounds and into the woods, carrying a white pillowcase over her shoulder which (unbeknown to the maids who watch her in surprise from the window) holds a small child.

The story then fast forwards to the current day and passes to Erica Calcott, Caroline’s Great-Granddaughter. Erica and her sister Beth have come back to Stourton Manor after 23 years of being kept away as their Grandmother, Meredith, has passed away and left them the property in her will. The two sisters haven’t been to the Manor since 1986 when their cousin Henry, who also used to stay at the house with them every summer during their childhood, vanished without trace never to be heard of again. Erica can’t remember what happened on that day and Beth won’t talk about it.

The story then goes further back in time to 1902 when Caroline was still living in New York and falls in love with a young cattle rancher from Oklahoma and once married, makes her way to her new life in the vast open prairies and overwhelming heat. From here, the book alternated between the stories of Caroline and Erica and while we start to put tiny pieces of the puzzle together to find out the fates of both children the pages just turn themselves.

I have read books before with dual narratives and I have often found that I prefer one story to the other, even to the stage where I will skim over the less favoured. Not so with The Legacy. Both stories are so compelling and end on cliff-hangers (of sorts) which makes the book even more pacey and page-turning. In the contemporary story, themes of depression, discovery, nostaligia and deception are dealt with and with Caroline’s turn of the century story there is loneliness, longing, desperation and envy which all built up to an act so impulsive and shocking that its repercussion  imprint themselves on the future generations of the Calcott family, including Erica’s.

Within this book of  long hot summers, secrets and deception there are two mysteries to solve too: the fate of both children. This is what gives the book its tremendous forward momentum. As the pages turn, we get closer and closer to the truth of what happened in both 1905 and 1986 but I have to admit that I was stunned with one of the conclusions. As a huge mystery/thriller fan I like to pride myself on being able to guess “whodunnit” early but……I didn not see this one coming! Don’t get me wrong, this isn’t a thriller book, but the fact that the book steers us towards the truth through the pages means that it is one cracking, fast-paced read.

In summary, The Legacy is a wonderfully crafted, beautifully written, skillfully interwoven book that is perfect for a summer read. I highly recommend and look forward to seeing other reviews of this book.

 

Has anyone else read it? Are you going to?

(this book was sent to me by Orion Publishing – thank you)

 

 

 

Book Review: The Help by Kathryn Stockett June 9, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Comfort Reading,Globe Trotting,Kathryn Stockett,Laugh Out Loud — The Book Whisperer @ 8:00 pm

The Blurb:

“Jackson, Mississippi, 1962. Black maids raise white children, but aren’t trusted not to steal the silver. Some lines will never be crossed. Aibileen is a black maid: smart, regal, and raising her seventeenth white child. Yet something shifted inside Aibileen the day her own son died while his bosses looked the other way. Minny, Aibileen’s best friend, is by some way the sassiest woman in Mississippi. But even her extraordinary cooking won’t protect Minny from the consequences of her tongue. Twenty-two-year-old Skeeter returns home with a degree and a head full of hope, but her mother will not be happy until there’s a ring on her finger. Seeking solace with Constantine, the beloved maid who raised her, Skeeter finds she has gone. But why will no one tell her where? Seemingly as different as can be, Skeeter, Aibileen and Minny’s lives converge over a clandestine project that will not only put them all at risk but also change the town of Jackson for ever. But why? And for what? The Help is a deeply moving, timeless and universal story about the lines we abide by, and the ones we won’t. Itis about how women, whether mothers or daughters, the help or the boss, relate to each other – and that terrible feeling that those who look after your children may understand them, even love them, better than you . . .”

 

  What I thought:

I finished this book this afternoon after trying to drag out the ending as long as possible. I did not want to leave these characters behind; I wanted to continue on their journey with them, make sure they were OK – I miss them already.

I have been hearing about this book and have read lots of positive reviews for the longest time but sometimes I get put off by books that have so much hype around them and end up passing them by. Oh how glad I am that I didn’t do this with The Help. It is worth every glowing review, every recommendation and every superlative ever written about it.

The book is set in Jackson, Mississippi in 1962 and is narrated by three women in turn. Aibileen and Minny are black maids and Miss Skeeter is a white college graduate who mourns the disappearance of her old maid and wants to do something more with her life than marry a local boy and have her kids raised by maids.

The story takes us with these women as the embark on a dangerous journey to try and change decades of prejudice and pave the way for a better life for the next generations. Through the words of each of these women we learn how rife racism and intolerance was back in the 1960′s deep south. There are tales of unbelievable cruelty and humiliation but also tales of tenderness and real love. It was so good to hear a story told primarily from the point of view of the black maids too and refreshing to hear both sides in all its rawness; the distrust and even hatred on both sides. The book also successfully managed to avoid being sensational or over-egging the pudding. Despite the subject matter (which is so important) the book never feels too heavy or preachy: it is as light as one of Minny’s famous caramel cakes and aswell as riotously funny and tender.

I implore you to read this book – you will fall in love with Aibileen, roar with laughter at Minny and rootfor Miss Skeeter for 450 pages. And I guarantee that Miss Hilly is one of the best bitches you will come across in any book! She is truly awful but so brilliantly drawn and you will root for her to get her just desserts (pun intended ;) ).

I feel like I have lost friends now I have finished this book. It is a true gem and I highly, highly recommend.

Have you read this book? What did you think?

I will be interviewing the author, Kathryn Stockett, on Friday and posting the interview that day. I am really looking forward to speaking to her and asking her all about the book. Hope you’ll check back then and read what she has to say.

 

Curl Up With……. Enid Blyton May 25, 2010

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Enid Blyton — The Book Whisperer @ 11:21 am
Tags:

My first idea for my  next “Curl Up With…” in the series was to do a piece on my favourite childhood books but when I got to work listing my favourites, it appeared that a good 75% were by Enid Blyton. That being the case I decided that this wonderful author deserved her own post.

My favourite childhood author

Enid Blyton was (and still is) one of my favourite ever authors. I credit her with my love of, not just books, but with story-telling, Here is an author whose tales of adventure took me to worlds I wanted to inhabit;  worlds of excitement and wonder and freedom and thrills.

Enid Mary Blyton was born on 11th August 1897 in London and wrote a staggering 800 books which were  translated into 90 languages making her the 5th most translated author ever, just behind Shakespeare (for anyone who is interested the actual top 10 is: Walt Disney Productions, Agatha Christie, Jules Verne, Shakespeare, Enid Blyton, Lenin, Barbara Cartland, Danielle Steel, Hans Christian Andersen, and Stephen King).

Noddy

 

1949 cover

My love affair with Blytons books started with Noddy, the little wooden boy who lives in his own house in Toyland and drives around in a yellow taxi with his friends Big Ears, Bumpy Dog and Mr Wobbly Man. Hot on Noddy’s heals came The Magic Faraway Tree and Wishing Chair series – infact one of my earliest memories is my Dad reading The Magic Faraway Tree to me at bedtime; I can still remember the excitement of knowing that we were going to read another chapter and being desperate to know what happened next. I can still relive that memory of pure joy and excitement at inhabiting this world.

The Magic Faraway Tree

In the first novel in the series, Jo, Bessie, Dick and Fanny (although these days their names have been changed to Joe, Beth, Rick and Frannie!) move to live near a large wood. One day, they go for a walk in the wood and discover an enormous tree whose branches seem to reach into the clouds. This is the Faraway Tree.

When the children climb the Faraway Tree they discover it is inhabited by different magical creatures, including Moon-face, Silky the fairy, The Saucepan Man, Dame Washalot, Mr. Watzisname and the Angry Pixie. They befriend some of these creatures, in particular Moon-face and Silky. At the very top of the tree they discover a ladder which leads them to a magical land. The lands at the top are sometimes extremely unpleasant – for example the Land of Dame Slap, an aggressive schoolteacher – and sometimes fantastically enjoyable – notably, the Land of Birthdays, Land of Goodies and the Land of Take-What-You-Want.

 Oh how I wanted to go!

The Famous Five

Three of the children, Julian, Dick and Anne, are brothers and sister. During their holidays, they are regularly sent to the seaside town of Kirrin to stay with their Aunt Fanny and Uncle Quentin, whose daughter, Georgina, is a tomboy who insists on being called George. George owns a large mongrel dog, Timmy, who is very much part of the group and a character in his own right. Timmy accompanies the four children on every adventure.

The stories always take place in the children’s school holidays when they return from their respective boarding schools. Every time they meet, they get caught up in an adventure, the location of which varies from book to book. Sometimes the scene is set close to George’s family home at Kirrin Cottage in Cornwall: “Kirrin Island“, a picturesque island owned by George and her family in Kirrin Bay, for example, presents many opportunities for adventure. George’s own home and various other houses the children visit or stay in are hundreds of years old, and often contain secret passages or smugglers‘ tunnels. In some books, the children go camping in the countryside, on a hike or holiday together elsewhere. The settings, however, are almost always rural and enable the children to discover the simple joys of cottages, islands, the English and Welsh countryside and sea shores, as well as the adventures, picnics, lemonade, bicycle trips, home-made food, and lashings of ginger beer.

Blyton always said that George was based on a real girl she had once known: in her later life, she admitted that the girl was herself.

 

The Mallory Towers  and St Clare’s series

My absolute favourite series and I still really, really, really want to go to those schools! (Yes, even now!) I want to have midnight feasts with lashings of ginger beer and to have high tea after a game of lacrosse. I have lost count of how many times I have read both these series and just reminiscing now is making me want to read them all over again right now!

 

There are 6 books in each series and each one is a different school year at the boarding schools of Mallory Towers and St Clare’s respectively. Mallory Towers is set on the cliff tops in Cornwall and its main character is Darrell Rivers.

 

The cover of my book from back in the 70's

The main characters of St Clare’s are twins Isabel and Pat O’Sullivan. The characters in both series are fabulous – there are nice girls, horrible girls, tricks played on teachers, midnight feasts, arguments, runaways, but ultimately fun and adventures. I WANT TO GO THERE!!

 

Controversy

Blyton’s status as a bestselling author is in spite of disapproval of her works from various perspectives, which has led to altered reprints of the books and withdrawals or “bans” from libraries. In the 1990s, Chorion, the owners of Blyton’s works, edited her books to remove passages that were deemed racist or sexist.

The Famous Five come under fire for both, starting with tomboy George often struggling to make herself heard over her older male cousins: In Five on a Hike Together, Julian gives the order  to George: “You may look like a boy and behave like a boy, but you’re a girl all the same. And like it or not, girls have got to be taken care of.” But perhaps more startling is the phrase “black as a nigger with soot” when Five Go Off to Camp. This is one of a number of phrases which ultimately rendered some of her books banned by libraries. These have now, obviously, been omitted from reprints along with name changes (there were rarther a lot of Dicks and Fanny’s in her originals).

Have you read any Enid Blyton?

 Just writing this post had made me want to drag down all my Malory Towers books from the shelf and emmerse myself in a world of sunshine, fun and adventure once again. A huge part of me owes my love of the printed word to this lady and I can still vividly remember the joy I got from eagerly anticipating the next installment of her books at bedtime.

Do you have any fond memories of childhood favourites? Have you read any Enid Blyton and if so what do you think?

 

 

Book Review: The Shadow of Your Smile by Mary Higgins Clark May 21, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Comfort Reading,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,Mary Higgins Clark — The Book Whisperer @ 3:57 pm

The Blurb:

“At age eighty-three and in failing health, Olivia Morrow knows she has little time left. The last of her line, she faces a momentous choice: expose a long-held family secret, or take it with her to her grave. Olivia has in her possession letters from her deceased cousin Catherine, a nun, now being considered for beatification by the Catholic Church. These letters reveal that, at the age of seventeen, Catherine gave birth to a son and gave him up for adoption and they identify the father as Alex Gannon, a world-famous doctor, scientist and inventor of medical patents. Now, two generations later, thirty-one year old paediatrician, Dr. Monica Farrell, Catherine’s granddaughter, stands as the rightful heir to what remains of the Gannon family fortune. But in telling Monica who she really is and getting what is lawfully hers, Olivia would have to betray Catherine’s wishes and reveal the story behind Monica’s ancestry. But as the pressure of Olivia’s impending choice weighs down on her, little does she realize that Alex Gannon’s grand-nephews – who are currently exploiting the Gannon inheritance to fund their profligate lifestyles – will stop at nothing to silence Olivia and prevent Monica from learning the secret, even murder.”

 

What I thought:

What an absolulute treat reading a Mary Higgins Clark book is! I always know I’m in for a good read when I pick up the Queen of Suspenses books.

In this book, her latests (published last month), thirty-two year old Dr Monica Farrell is at the centre of a  plot to keep her from what is rightfully hers. Although she doesn’t know it (as her father was adopted as a baby and never knew his real family) she is heir to The Gannon Corporation, run by a quartet of greedy, cheating men who will stop at nothing to make sure Monica doesn’t find out that the corporation belongs to her, including murder.

Monica, who is a Pediatrician at a Manhattan Hospital, recieves a tip that an elderly lady, Olivia Morrow, may have some information regarding her fathers birth family and agrees to meet her at her appartment. However, when she arrives the next day she is too late; Olivia is already dead. When several others also turn up dead, and Monica herself appears to be the next target, it’s the old race against time to see who will triumph.

 As with all her books, Higgins Clark, manages to entice you to keep turning those pages by way of short chapters and no uneccessary detail. There is, however, one thing that does bother me at the end which I can’t really go into here as it may spoil the book for some people. It is something that is revealed in the letters at the end of the book and if anyone reads this and wants to discuss please do contact me as I would like to see if the same thing bothers you as it did me.

That said, this book still gets full marks from me. I have been ill the last 2 days and MCH’s books are exactly the tonic I need.

Simon and Schuster kindly sent me my copy of this book for review. Thank you!

 

I will be posting my interview with Mary Higgins Clark this weekend so please look out for that!

 

The Best 11 Book Club Reads EVER!!! April 30, 2010

Yes, that’s right – 11! For two reasons: 1) I couln’t narrow it down to ten 2) I thought 11 was an interesing enough number that would get your attention (it worked, didn’t it?) ;)

Now that’s out of the way, I will explain that these 11 books are the best book club reads in my opinion. Over the years I have been a member of a few bookclubs – both online and face-to-face and I have tried to include books that got the most stimulation discussions. Some were so fantastic for debate that we were discussing them for weeks or even months afterward, some of them were loved by some and hated by others but all provided lively chat and food for thought.

Here I am sharing some of my favourites with you.

 

The Big 13

1) First up is We Need to Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver. This is the book that made our book club run well over time and was still being rased and talked about and compared for months after we read it. It is an utterly fantastic book. I found Shrivers style took me a while to get into the flow of the book at first, but once I found my rythem I couldn’t put it down. The book is about a teenage boy called Kevin who kills a number of his class-mates in a shool killing. The story is narrated by Kevin’s mother who writes a series of letters to her husband who is no longer with her and she talks of before Kevin was born and how she felt when she got pregnant and when Kevin was born through to the aftermath of the killings.

What makes this such an interesting book is the nature vs nurture debate. Kevin’s mum admits that she wasn’t especially maternal and never quite bonded with Kevin as a baby. There was a clear divide in our group that we didn’t realise towards the end of the discussion: most of the members who were parents blamed the mum, and most of those who were not parents thought Kevin had been born that way (me included). There is no clear answer to this question and one of the most interesting things is deciding what you believe based on the evidence.

A seriously great book for a book club and a twist at the end that will have you gasp out loud (I guarantee it!). Please, please let me know what you think if you read this – I’d love to know your take on it.

 

 

2) The Book Thief by Markus Zusac is next up. I have read this book with both online and face-to-face book clubs and it got the same reaction at both – most people loved it!

This book is narrated by Death and follows the story of a young girl, Liesl, who growing up in Germany in WW2 . She is orphaned and sent to live with a family on Himmel Street. The book brilliantly captures living during such a difficult time, with a family who aren’t hers, through hiding a Jew in the cellar, through watching people she loves die. She also steals books wherever she can (as they are so scarce). The relationships in this book are so brilliantly drawn that most people (even grown men) admitted to shedding a tear or two at the end (me? I bawled my head off!).

Makes a great discussion and again was one that lingered through subsequent months.

 

3) The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters. OK, I confess that I haven’t actually read this as part of a group but there were quite a few people reading it at the same time as me on various blogs and there were some fantastic discussions going on in the blogosphere about this book.

Set in the 1940′s, on the eve of the NHS in rural England, a Doctor visits an old stately manor to see a maid who was complaing of stomach pains. When Dr Farrady digged a little further it turned out that the maid wasn’t ill at all but trying to get sent home as she was afraid of things “going bump in the night” (and day!) in the house. Farrady strikes up a friendship with the house members (of whom there are only 3 left) and becomes embroiled in some very strange goings on.

The real taking point is at the end of the book. It appears that Waters has left her readers to make up their own minds about what was really going on in the house but there are some great theories flying around that makes this a good read for debate.

4) Blindness by Jose Saramago is in at #4. I first read this is the Goodreads group The Next Best Book (which has over 5000 members and is run by my lovely friend Lori). I picked it up to read as there was so much discussion and enthusiasm around this book at the time. What a read! I was umprepared to love it so much but I honestly couldn’t put it down.

This book is amazing, incredible, breathtaking. It was recommended to me and once I started it  I was barely able to put it down. This book earned a place in my top 5  books of all time and deservedly so.

The story starts with a man in his car at traffic lights who goes suddenly blind. He is helped home by a stranger, who a few hours later also goes blind. Within a few days the blindness has spread round half the city and also those afflicted are herded up by the government into a disused mental assylum and left alone. The wards quickly become overrun with filth and chaos ensues. In the middle of this, though, we get to know a handful of characters very well and it is really their story that we follow through the neverending days, lack of food and riots. The whole story is told through long paragraphs of uunbroken text. There are no quotation marks, hardly any punctuation and none of the characters are given names. But it works!

This book has so much to discuss and I also read it with my face-to-face group and it sparked real mixed reviews which made a great talking point. One of my favourite books!

 

5) All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque. I read this with my group many years ago but it still sticks in my mind. The whole group, without exception, loved it and was very moved by it.

It is set in WW1 and written from the German point of view. The difference is – there is no difference. Those soldiers had the same fears that our soldiers did, the same hopes and dreams. There is no them and us; only frightened boys on the front line doing as they are told and not really knowing why.

Tender, shocking, tragic and sad but ultimately one of the best books I have read.

 

 

6) Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton. I read this before discussing it at a face-to-face group but was really eager to join in with the discussion. This book had two camps – the lovers and the haters. I was a lover! This book is one of my favourites ever.

Wharton has the most amazing talent to pull me right into her stories as though I am there right with the characters. Starkfield (where the book was set) – brilliant name for such a place; it was just that – freezing, barron, snow-covered, lonely. But this is quite possibly one of the most romantic love-stories I have ever read: it’s so real you can almost touch it. It’s tangible and it’s tragic. This book, despite the fact that it’s only 100 pages long, took me a couple of days to read. I just had to savour every word and re-read passages over again.

It’s clearly not a book for everyone based on the fact that it split the group but it certainly got us talking and debating as to why. Some people found it too bleak, I found it just beautiful.

6) Perfume: The Story of a Murderer by Patrick Suskind is in at six. This is one of the weirdest books I have ever read but also one of the best.

Survivor, genius, perfumer, killer: this is Jean-Baptiste Grenouille. He is abandoned on the filthy streets of 17th century Paris as a child, but grows up to discover he has an extraordinary gift: a sense of smell more powerful than any other human’s. Soon, he is creating the most sublime fragrances in all the city. Yet there is one odor he cannot capture. It is exquisite, magical: the scent of a young virgin. And to get it he must kill. And kill. And kill.

This book went down really well in our book group (although not everybody liked it). The strangeness of the book was its genius for me. It got a great conversation going – especially the ending (which you will NOT see coming!).

 

7) The Road by Cormac McCarthy. This is another one that I first read for The Next Best Book Club on Goodreads. This one, however, got a completely split reaction: lovers and haters. I LOVED it!

I read this book in a day – I just found it impossible to put down. Although it’s bleak I found it to be written in a gentle, almost dream-like way which I loved. The story is of a man and his son (whose names we never learn) who are travelling south during the harsh, post-apocolyptic winter. They set off along the road with their cart and all their worldly belongings in it. We never find out the reason that the road and the fields and whole cities are burnt and abandoned; we are left the imagine for ourselves if it is due to war, asteroid etc.

It is a fabulous book and whether you love it or hate it I can guarantee that it will spark plenty of discussion – there’s so much to talk about with this book.

8) The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood. Another dystopia novel – they really do generate some great banter though. This is another one that went down really well with out book group; in fact it won “book of the year” the year we read it.

The really interesting thing about this book is that although it is meant to be set in the America of the future (Gilead) it really could be so many countries today (think Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq to name a few). When I first read it back it the early 90′s I took it at face value – I saw a world in the future that I thought was possible. When I read it again 15 years later (and having been exposed to the aftermath of 9/11 and the war in the middle east) I was able to draw so many parallels with the world today.

Thumbs up for this group read!

9) Wild Swans by Jung Chang. I nominated this book for our book group back in 2004 because I was about to go to China on holiday and wanted to read some more of the history. Some people were dubious about reading it as it is such a thick book and it’s non-fiction but it ended up one of the most popluar books were read as a group.

This book is written by Jung Chang and she recounts her life and that of her mother and grandmother before her during some of the most turbulant times in China’s history. Her grandmother was a warlord’s concubine, her mother was in a prominet position in Mao’s communist party before being denounced and Jung herself marched and worked for Mao until the doubts crept in. What these three generations of women lived through is so beyond belief at times that you think that it could only be fiction.

All agreed that this book was well worth the time and it is one that you won’t forget in a hurry either.

 

10) The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox. Another one from the face-to-face book group that was enjoyed by pretty much everyone.

This is the story 2 young girls, Kitty and Esme, growing up in the 20′s and 30′s in first colonial India and then in Edinbugh when their parents move back home. They are sisters who share everything and love each other very much yet one is the dutiful, polite, home-maker type and the the other is the slightly rebellious younger sister who wants to stay on at shcool rather than marry a nice boy. After a series of events (which include trying on her Mothers clothes of all things!) and a shocking incident that happens to her, Esme (the younger sister) is sent to a lunatic assylum and dissowned by her own family and where she remains for the next 61 years.

What a discussion this provoked! The rights of women (or lack of them), the things that could get you locked up back then (over half of us agreed that we wouldn’t have stood a chance in those days) and the shame that surrounds supposed mental illness. All that wrapped inside a brilliantly told story.

 

 

11) The bonus book! And I’m cheating with this one as I have never actually read it with a group despite my many pleas over the years. This book is BRILLIANT! It is one of my favourites of all time (in my top 3) – why oh why don’t people want to read this? (I know at least 2 readers of this blog who will back me up on this – Virginie and Lua, help me out with this!)

In The Magus by John Fowles young Englishman, Nicholas Urfe, accepts a teaching position on a Greek island where his friendship with the owner of the islands most magnificent estate leads him into a nightmare. As reality and fantasy are deliberately confused by staged deaths, erotic encounters, and terrifying violence, Urfe becomes a desperate man fighting for his sanity and his life. The Magus is a book that really messes with your head -  filled with shocks and chilling surprises and so many twists that every time you think you have it sussed you are thrown way off course again, this book is as thought-provoking as it is entertaining.

I demand that you all read this book! It is pure brilliance and would make such a fantastic group discussion – the only problem would be where to start!


Some truly great books there for you to check out. I have chosen them as being the ones that created the liveliest debate and discussion as well as being great reads.

Have you read any of the above? Will you share with us all what you thought about them? Do you agree or not agree? And of course, if you do go away and read any of them (in a group or on your own) please do pop back and tell us what you thought – I can’t wait to hear :)

 

Book Review: Part of the Furniture by Mary Wesley April 22, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Comfort Reading,Laugh Out Loud,Mary Wesley — The Book Whisperer @ 6:15 am

 The Blurb:

When Juno Marlowe finds herself caught in the middle of a London air raid, she is quickly rescued by an elegant gentleman who offers her shelter and a mysterious invitation to his father’s country estate. The next morning he is dead, and she is once again alone with nowhere to go. At seventeen, Juno is used to feeling invisible, but now, without family and friends, she finds herself desperately in need of companionship, some warm clothes, and above all, a life as more than part of the furniture. How Juno finds this and more is beautifully related in this irresistible novel from one of our most enchanting writers.

What I thought:

This was my first Mary Wesley. It was a battered old paperback that I picked up from a second-hand bookshop – I was drawn to the cover which made me feel summery. I loved it. Wesley’s style is so unlike any other author I can think to compare it to sparse and to the point. There is no room for flowery prose in this book but yet its simplicity and matter-of-factness drew me right in and I really cared about the characters.

The book starts with seventeen-year-old Juno who has just seen her two childhood friends off to war in 1942 and she is wondering through the blackened streets of London with nowhere to go, when she is pulled inside a house by a stranger during an air raid. The stranger offers her a bed for the night but when she wakes up he is dead. Some weeks later, after living almost rough in London she boards a train to Cornwall to deliver a letter from the dead man to his Father. When she arrives at Copplestone’s Farm she is welcomed into the fold without question. I don’t want to spoil the rest of the book, not because there are any spectacular twists involved but because it’s fun to follow Juno in her journey.

I just loved the characters, all of them who were easy to warm to in some way. The bluntness and ‘frightful poshness’ of their speach was interspersed with humour, some of which had me laughing out loud.

 

“Are you staying for supper?”

“If I am invited.”

“Could you call off your Mosley [dog], he is rogering my bitch.”

 

I thoroughly enjoyed this book; more than I expected to in fact. Mary Wesley has written many more books (some of which I also have at home) which I fully intend to read sometime soon. I would recommend this book for frazzled brains – something gentle to sooth the soul. And an ending that had me hooting with laughter!

 

 

 

Book Review: East Lynne by Ellen Wood March 22, 2010

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Ellen Wood,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 4:20 pm

  What Amazon says:

“‘Coward! Sneak! May good men shun him, from henceforth! may his Queen refuse to receive him! You, an earl’s daughter! Oh, Isabel! How utterly you have lost yourself!’ When the aristocratic Lady Isabel abandons her husband and children for her wicked seducer, more is at stake than moral retribution. Ellen Wood played upon the anxieties of the Victorian middle classes who feared a breakdown of the social order as divorce became more readily available and promiscuity threatened the sanctity of the family. In her novel the simple act of hiring a governess raises the spectres of murder, disguise, and adultery. Her sensation novel was devoured by readers from the Prince of Wales to Joseph Conrad and continued to fascinate theatre-goers and cinema audiences well into the next century.”

What I thought:

Eat your heart out Wilkie Collins. What a fantastic book this is! I just loved every minute of it (and there were a LOT of minutes – for some reason it took me an age to read). For about three weeks I felt like I was living in the middle of a Victorian soap-opera. There was murder, betrayal, divorce, disguises and death and all this set among a backdrop of stately homes and horse-and-carriages. What’s not to love?

I can’t understand why this book is not better known or held in higher esteem. Hallelujah for Oxford World Classics reviving this book (with a fab cover too). I haven’t read anywhere near the amount of Victorian classics that I want to yet but for me, this ranks among my favourites now. Classed as a sensational novel in the 1800’s when it was written, this book was serialised in a weekly newspaper. How I would have waited with baited breath for each new edition to hit the news- stands!

The books main character is Lady Isabel Vane who lives at East Lynne (a grand stately home) with her Father. When her Father, the Earl of Mount Severn, dies and his debts are discovered Lady Isabel is proposed to by the lovely young lawyer, Archibald Carlyle (much to the heartache of one Barbara Hare who, unbeknown to Archibald, is in love with him). Lady Isabel and Archibald seem happy together and go on to have three children, but all the while Archibald is helping Barbara Hare to clear her brother’s name for a murder that was committed some years ago and for which he escaped the scene of the crime and hasn’t been seen since. With all the clandestine meetings between Archibald and Barbara, Lady Isabel is overcome by jealousy and in the heat of the moment abandons her entire family for a man of very dubious character. I don’t want to say too much else for fear of spoiling the book for anyone, but needless to say that this is most definitely not the last we see of Lady Isabel (or the “cad” she ran off with). With misinterpreted conversations gallore, hushed secrets and christmas-cracker disguises this book gallops along with you not daring to let go.

I can honestly say that, for me, there was not a dull moment in this book. It is very accessible and easy to read, even for those who find Victorian literature hard going, and long though the book was, I was sad when I came to the end.

I think I can honestly say that the sensational novels of the Victorian era are becoming my favourites, having also loved Lady Audley’s Secret (Mary Elizabeth Braddon) and The Woman In White (Wilkie Collins). I love the dramatic story-lines and the fact that you can almost hear the swish of the stage curtain at the end of a chapter and the “DUN DUN DUUUUUUUN”!!!

Fabulous book. Highly recommended! Why oh why is this book not better known???

 

Book Review: You Belong to Me by Mary Higgins Clark March 17, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Comfort Reading,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,Mary Higgins Clark — The Book Whisperer @ 2:14 pm

Why is it that I never meet any other Mary Higgins Clark fans? This lady is my hero! She is my curl-up-on-the-sofa-with-the-fire-on-and-a-good-mystery-in-hand QUEEN!!

Are there any closet fans out there or is it really just me?

A young radio journalist, Susan Chandler, decides to do a new series on her show about women who just vanish without trace. With the help of a book written by psychiatrist Donald Richards (whos own wife disappeared) she begins her new series with a piece on the unsolved disappearance of Regina Clausen who vanished into thin air whilste on a round-the-world cruise three years ago. When Susan started the show, what she didn’t bargain for was a mysterious call from a frightened lady calling herself “Karen” and who said that she was approached by a man on a cruise ship two years ago and who gave her a turquoise ring with the word “you belong to me” on it.

When Susan recieves another call from a young girl who also has a ring, alarm bells start to ring and soon anyone who seems to have any sort of tenuous link to the mysterious man who has been buying the rings start turning up dead. With the usual several possible suspects, all of which have some link to Susan, it becomes a race against time to catch the culprit before Susan becomes his next victim.

As always, I love Mary Higgins Clark books. I love the feeling of knowing you’re in for a good ride before you even begin: the strong female protagonist, the list of potential culprits with several red herrings thown in for good measure and the short chapters that have you declaring “just one more” before you find you have read the whole thing. This lady never lets me down!

This book has now put me at completing 4 / 8 books in my thriller & suspense challenge.

 

Book Review: Nighttime is My Time by Mary Higgins Clark March 4, 2010

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,Mary Higgins Clark — The Book Whisperer @ 6:29 pm

What Amazon says:

“A high-powered Hollywood agent is found drowned in her swimming pool. Jane Sheridan, a former classmate of the deceased, believes this new death – the fifth from her graduate year – is related to the forthcoming twenty-year reunion of Stonecroft Academy. She is there to be honoured during a ceremony, but slowly realises someone is out to stop her. And when she recieves a mysterious, taunting fax about her daughter Lily – a daughter she secretly gave up for adoption twenty years before – Jean understands that whoever it is knows far more about her life than she first thought. With the deaths and the message haunting her, Jean attends the reunion – but events begin to spiral out of control. As she draws closer to the truth, Jean is unaware that a vicious killer is among the guests; a killer who works under the cover of darkness, and who will stop at nothing to complete his mission…”

 

What I thought:

You probably know by now that I am a huge Mary Higgins Clark fan. Her books are what I class as comfort mysteries; I can always rely on them for a quick, page-turning read and I have never been disappointed by one yet. This one was no different – to me it’s like snuggling up in a cosy blanket by the fire.

In this book, Jean Saunders attends a school reunion (2o years after graduating). She is on the honour list of ex-pupils who are now authors, actors etc. There is Jean herself, her old friend Laura and 5 guys she went to school with who are all now well-known in their own right. Before the reunion, however, Jean had started anonymous letters from someone about a daughter she gave up for adoption 20 years ago when her boydfriend was killed in a hit-and-run. Nobopdy, she belives, knew about the pregnancy, let alone the baby (whom she called Lily). The notes get more and more sinister and evetually threaten Lily’s life. While Jean is occupied with who could be sending these notes, someone else from the reunion has noticed that 4 out of the 6 girls who used to sit together at luch all those years ago, are now dead (in the order that they sat) and the only two left are Laura and Jean.

The killer in Nighttime is My Time is one of the former pupils who is on the honour role at the reunion, but we just don’t know which one. Any one of the five could be the perpetrator. The only thing that know about him is that he was teased at school and called “The Owl” which he now adopts as his murderous persona.

As per all of MHC’s books, there are plenty of suspects and red herrings to throw us off the scent and we don’t find out right until the end who The Owl is. With several murders, kidnappings, threatening letters all going on at the same time….it’s a race against the clock to stop the killer in his tracks before Laura and Jean (and Jean’s daughter) becoming his next victims.

Highly recommended as always for some good old-fashioned mystery story-telling. MHC is my hero!

See my other Mary Higgins Clark reviews here.

This book is #2 / 8 completed in the Thriller & Mystery challenge hosted at Book Chick City’s blog.

 

Book Review: Shopaholic series by Sophie Kinsella February 15, 2010

Filed under: Chick Lit,Comfort Reading,Sophie Kinsella — The Book Whisperer @ 2:25 pm

In honour of Valentines I thought it was appropriate to review some chicklit (my favourite comfort read genre – I love some brain candy!). One of my favourite chicklit authors is Sophie Kinsella (along with Katie Fforde) – her books never ever let me down; they are just wonderful to read and always leave me with a big smile on my face. I have already reviewed Kinsella’s standalone books here.

 

Oh how I loved this book. The Secret Dreamworld of a Shopaholic (Confessions of a Shopaholic in the US)  is the first book in the Shopaholic series and where we first meet Becky Bloomwood. Becky had me crying with laughter at her shopping addictions and I hate to say it but I had several “oh my god, I do that!” moments (more than I care to admit to in fact).

Becky is a bored financial journalist who just can’t stop spending money she hasn’t got. She’s constantly in trouble with the bank and all her store cards have gone over their limits so she decides to try and save money using a self help book. I really did laugh out loud at some of the ideas she tried to try to curtail her spending, which usually ended up with her spending more.

Shopping has never been so much fun.

 

In this second helping, Shopaholic Abroad (Shopaholic Takes Manhattan in the US),  Becky Bloomwood is back and this time she’s in New York (think Prada, Barneys, Bloomingdales…) all a recipe for disaster in Becky’s world. Becky has gone to the Big Apple with her boyfriend Luke and is staying at the Four Seasons while Luke tries to launch his business in the States. Becky has great intentions of sightseeing and getting herself a great job on American TV, but she still can’t resist the lure of the shops…. even the museums have stores! Since according to Becky the money you spend overseas really doesn’t count she feels free to go crazy, and in her usual fashion, she does. But when Luke gets wind of her excessive spending their relationship becomes in serious jeopardy.

I read this in one evening, I just couldn’t put it down. It’s absolutely hillarious and I howled with laughter all the way through.

 

I cried with laughter at this next chapter in the Shopaholic saga (Shopaholic Ties the Knot) on so many occasions; it was just brilliant!


Luke has proposed to Becky and both families immediately leap into organisation mode, planning weddings in both England and New York. Becky is so caught up in both weddings (a big over-the-top affair in the New York Plaza with $3000 wedding cake and pine trees shipped in from Switzerland and a traditional, stripey marquee in her parents back garden) that she doesn’t have the heart to cancel either of them and the weddings just get nearer and nearer…….
Instead of taking the bull by the horns and sorting it out, she does what she knows best – goes shopping.

This book was hillarious and I just love seeing what situations Becky finds herself in next. When her best friend, Suze, goes into labour I couldn’t see the words on the page for tears streaming dowbn my face with laughter!

Shopaholic & Sister opens with Becky & Luke on their honeymoon round the world trip. Finally growing tired of traveling after 10mths they decide to go home early. But not everyone is excited that they’re home. Not least Becky’s parents who have the unenviable task of telling Becky that she has a long lost sister she never knew about. Becky being Becky sees hours of girly hours and shopping with her sister ahead of her. But as is usually with real life…..things don’t go according to plan.

Beckys plans of her and her new sis hitting the shops in their new stilettos she (gasp!) discovers that her sister Jess is a tightfisted spendthrift. Opposites certainly don’t attract in this page-tuner and Jess is a hilarious character with her obsession with collecting rocks and going on outdoor protests. Read it and weep (with laughter!)

Once again, in Shopaholic and Baby Becky Brandon manages to get up to her eyeballs in misfortune, sticky situations (and debt!) and yes we know it’ll all be alright in the end but half the fun is following her mishaps along the way. In this latest book, a pregnant Becky thinks that Luke is having an affair with her obstetritian, Venetia (who just happens to be an ex-girlfriend from his uni days). As she gets bigger (and more paranoid) she decides to have them followed by a Private Detective but still manages to find plenty of time for doing what she does best – shopping (5 prams, 400 count egyptian cotton sheets for the baby’s crib, Christian Dior baby dressing-gowns). BRILLIANT!!!

 

If you haven’t read any of the shopaholic series you are missing an absolutel treat! They are true laugh-out-loud books and you can’t help but laugh at the scrapes Becky always managed to get herself into.

 

The next in the series is Mini Shopaholic about Becky and her now toddler, Minnie, and the disasters that befall them (it sounds like Becky has finally met her match!). This book is due out in September 2010 (no cover yet) and I cannot wait!

 

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Book Review: Five Quarters of the Orange by Joanne Harris January 30, 2010

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Globe Trotting,Historical,Joanne Harris — The Book Whisperer @ 10:38 pm

What Amazon says: “Joanne Harris’ sensational novel Five Quarters of the Orange revolves around a recipe book, continuing the theme of culinary intrigue begun in Chocolat and Blackberry Wine. Framboise, the middle-aged narrator, begins her story in Les Laveuses, on the banks of the Loire:

When my mother died she left the farm to my brother, Cassis, the fortune in the wine cellar to my sister, Reine-Claude, and to me, the youngest, her album and a two-litre jar containing a single black Perigord truffle.

Framboise returns to the village where she grew up during wartime, and with the help of the recipes scribbled in her mother’s album, opens up a small restaurant. However, she is desperate to keep her identity a secret even amongst the aged villagers with whom she played on the banks of the Loire in the years of German occupation during the Second World War. Framboise immerses herself once again in the peaceful rhythms of village life, pungently evoked by Harris’s evocative prose. But slowly, reluctantly, Framboise begins to unravel the terrible wartime secret that drove her family away from the village. As she cuts between idyllic descriptions of the village and the increasingly dark memories of the war, Framboise admits:

I know, I know. You want me to get to the point. But this is at least as important as the rest, the method of telling, and the time taken to tell. It has taken me fifty-five to begin, at least let me do it in my own way.”

 

 

What I thought: I am head over heels in love with this book. Only a terrific author can write about something as appalling as war and occupation and uneccesary death but yet make you feel so alive and carefree whilste reading it. The prose was as mouthwatering, succulent and juicy as the food in the book and I wanted to be there! Yes, I wanted to run down to the Loire and swim and splash and yell and hang upsidedown from trees overhanging the river and race through sun-soaked fields and pick fruit in the orchards. I wanted to sneak off on the back of bike to the nearest village to watch a film in the cinema unbeknown to my mother, I wanted to set traps in the Loire and catch fish and I wanted to go to market on a Thursday morning and sell home-made pastries. And all this under German occupation. Only a talented author can make you feel like that while telling the story of something far more sinister.

This is a book about an old woman who comes back to the village of her childhood, but can’t allow the villagers to find out who she really is. Aged nine Framboise and her family has to make a hasty exit from Les Laveuses and now she can’t allow them to know the truth of who she really is and also what really happnened back in 1942. The book is as sumptuous as it is teasing with bits of information that allows the reader to peice all the fragments together over the course of the story and lead us to the final catastrophic moments.

I adored this book; it was ripe, tangy and a feast for the senses. I want to read it all over again. But if not, it has made me hungry and now I need to go and raid the fridge………

This book is in my Top 10 ever!

 

If you enjoy Five Quarters of the Orange then you should also enjoy Blackberry Wine by Joanne Harris.

Unfortunately I never got round to reviwing this one as I read it on holiday last year and now I’m not sure I could do it justice by trying to remember the details. However, if you liked Chocolat or Five Quarters of the Orand then there is a huge chance that you will love this one. It’s one of her three “foodie” themed books and is totally magical. The book is actually narrated by a bottle of wine (sounds strange, but honestly it really works!). Again, it is set in rural France and has the same effervescence of the other two. Enjoy!

 

 

 

Book Reviews: Mary Higgins Clark January 12, 2010

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,Mary Higgins Clark — The Book Whisperer @ 10:12 pm

I only read my first Mary Higgins Clark book last year and she has fast become one of my favourite authors. Her books are my comfort reads in the same way that Agatha Christie’s are – great old-fashioned whodunnits. And there is always a great epilogue that leaves you feeling satisfied at the end.

I have just finhished The Cradle Will Fall which is now one of my favourites. In The Cradle Will Fall, County prosecutor Katie DeMaio lands in hospital after a minor car accident. During the night, she sleepily watches through the window as a man loads a woman’s body into the boot of a car. Is it just a medicated nightmare, or is the scene horrifyingly real? On the same night, a 7 month pregnant woman, who had waited 10 years for a baby, drinks cyonide and kills herself. When police start looking into the suicide and become suspicious and potential witnesses start turning up dead, it’s a race against time to find the culprit.

From the first few pages I knew that this was going to be another page-turner. This book is different to some of the others that I have read in that you know from the start who the killer is so it’s not so much of a whodunnit but a will-they-catch-him-in-time. Massive thumbs up!

In Where are you Now? , a university student vanishes without a trace for no apparant reason and calls home every mothers day for the next 10 years. His messages are brief and always end up with him telling her not to look for him. After his latest call home, his sister vowes to find him and opens a can of worms that someone wants to stay buried when long buried secrets are unearthed.  Another massive thumbs up for this one!

Just Take My Heart is perhaps my least favourite of MHC’s books, but that said I still thoroughly enjoyed it. Emily Wallace is an Assistant Prosecuting attorney. She has just been handed the high profile case of the murder of movie-star, Natalie Raines. Natalie was killed in her own kitchen and her ex-husband, Greg, is on trial for the killing. The only problem is that Natalie’s mother, doesn’t believe Greg could have killed her. Emilyworries that she is not up to handling the case as she has had a heart transplant recently and has also lost her husband. The trial finally goes ahead and Greg is convicted. But Emily is now having second thoughts about his guilt. She begins her own investigation…….

In Two Little Girls in Blue, twins, Kelly and Kathy, are kidnapped for ransom while their parents are out and a babysitter is looking after them. The money is paid, but the handover goes wrong and only Kelly is returned. Initially, it seems that Kathy has died, but twin Kathy still talks to her and convinces her parents that she is still alive. Evidence mounts, but the police are frustrated at every turn. The tension mounts as the race to find the little girl alive builds and the kidnappers become desperate….

I heard That Song Before: Twenty-two years ago, 6 year old Kay heard a man who is hidden from view, whistle a familiar song. She also over heard a conversation between a man and a women and that same night 18 year old Susan Altrop disappeared . Years later she is now married to Peter Carrington who is still suspected of murdering Susan and he is arrested. Peter is tried for the crime but his wife is sure that he is innocent and finds new evidence….

In No Place Like Home Celia Nolan is given a very expensive gift for her birthday by her new husband who wanted to surprise her – a house! The house is beautiful and set in lovely countryside, but what Alex Nolan doesn’t know is that his wife has already been there. In fact she lived there as a child under a different name – Liza Barton. The same Liza Barton (now dubbed Little Lizzie Borden by the townsfolk) who shot and killed her Mother and wounded her stepfather in that very house aged 10.

Twenty-four years later, all Celia’s old memories are awakened by the house as it appears that someone is trying to scare her by painting messages on the lawn and leaving old newspaper clippings around of the Liza Barton case. Does somebody remember her and know who she is? Just when she thinks things can’t get any worse, people start turning up dead and all the evidence seems to be pointing at Celia.

On the Street Where You Live was the perfect good ole-fashioned whodunnit to read while being wrapped up in the front of the fire, poorly.
Emily Graham moves in to her ansestoral home in Spring Lake, NJ knowing that over 100 years ago a family member was murdered in that very town. In the following years, two more of her ancestors friends were also murdered and the town now appears to have a copycat murdered over a century later with young girls disappearing on the same dates. The last date that fits with the older crimes is less than a week ago so there is a race against time to find the perpertrator before he strikes again.

As with all MHG’s books, there are suspects aplently and you soon learn that, true to form, it could be anyone of them. I love the fact that her books have no gratuitous gore in them, just an old- fashioned whodunnit.

And finally here is her new book that is due out in May (CANNOT WAIT!). Here is the synopsys for The Shadow of Your Smile from Goodreads:

“When at twenty-six Olivia Morrow married Jonathan Williams, she joked that it was a good thing she was a psychologist. Thirty-four year old Jonathan and his identical twin brother, Charles, were brilliant obstetricians, renowned for their research, and sharing a thriving practice in Manhattan. Olivia, like most people, had difficultly telling them apart. Five years later, Charles is found murdered in his midtown apartment, apparently the victim of a robbery. Olivia understands the terrible grief her husband is enduring at the loss of his twin until, as the months pass, she begins to suspect that it is not Charles who was killed but her husband Jonathan. Her search for the truth plunges her into life-threatening danger which is only increased when she crosses the path of Henry Patton, a criminologist, who is on a search of his own, the truth behind a long-ago scandal involving his grandmother that must now be solved at all costs.”

 

Book Review: Lady Audley’s Secret by Mary Elizabeth Braddon January 12, 2010

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,Mary Elizabeth Braddon,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 11:01 am

Info from Goodreads: “This Victorian bestseller, along with Braddon’s other famous novel, Aurora Floyd, established her as the main rival of the master of the sensational novel, Wilkie Collins. A protest against the passive, insipid 19th-century heroine, Lady Audley was described by one critic of the time as
“high-strung, full of passion, purpose, and movement.” Her crime (the secret of the title) is shown to threaten the apparently respectable middle-class world of Victorian England.”

What I thought: This book was really good fun. A 19th century who-dunnit complete with beautiful but cunning villainess, rambling old houses and an upper-class layabout-turned-detective. Fabulous!

This was one of the first “sensation” novels ever written, and while it doesn’t have the sophisticated and multi-layered plots of today that keep us guessing until the very end and on the edge of our seets, it is nonetheless a great page turner and so much fun. This book was originally serialised in a paper back in 1862, and I can imagine eagerly awaiting the next installment as they would have done back then. The language is not complex either, which makes for an easy and much quicker read than some novels of this era.

I thoroughly enjoyed Lady Audley’s Secret although I am ashamed to say that I had never even heard of the author until I picked this up. I will hopefully read one of her other books this year; probably Aurora Floyd.

 

Book Review: The Diaries of Adam and Eve by Mark Twain January 7, 2010

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Globe Trotting,Historical,Mark Twain,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 10:44 am

What a lovely little book. Twain explores what it could have been like for two very different people to discover the odd world around them and he does it with much humour. Watching both Adam and Eve play their sterotypical roles to perfection is redemed by Twain’s humour; Adam wanting to do nothing but build things and Eve wanting to do nothing but talk (much to Adam’s dismay) is both funny and lovable. Eve wants to discover everything; she names all the animal and mothers them all, she delights in every new thing she discovers.

Entry from Adam’s diary: “Perhaps I ought to remember that she is very young, a mere girl, and make allowances. She is all interest, eagerness, vivacity. The world to her is a charm, a wonder, a mystery, a joy. She can’t speak for delight when she finds a new flower; she must pet it and caress it and smell it and talk to it and pour out endearing names upon it.  And she is colour mad: brown rocks, yellow sand, gray moss, green foliage, blue sky – the pearl of the dawn, the purple shadows on the mountains, the golden islands floating in crimson seas at sunset, the palid moon moon sailing through the shredded cloud-rack, the star-jewels glittering in the wastes of space.”

How wonderful to be able to look at the world through those fresh eyes and see so much beauty in it. That part was as beautiful as it was amusing to see Adam’s confusion to why she is so in awe of everything.

When Adam comes home from a few days trip away he finds Eve with something can he is convinced is a fish until he put it in the water to see and it sank. He then decides that it must be both kangaroo and bear before finally settling on the fact that it may be one of them. As well as Cain and Abel, the couple go on to  have 7 more children (two of them named Gladys and Edwina!). Their long life togehter inc ludes their first experience of death and not understanding it, and their unconditional partnership until Eve finally goes to her grave.

Definitely recommended.

 

Book Review: Behind the Scenes at the Museum by Kate Atkinson January 5, 2010

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Kate Atkinson,Laugh Out Loud — The Book Whisperer @ 4:38 pm

I picked this book up as part of a 3 for 2 offer in a bookshop when I had already chosen my first two and was in a rush – I didn’t even read the blurb on the back, I just vaguely remembered someone telling me how good it was.

What an absolute treat then to find that this ended up being the best of the lot – infact I can honestly say that I haven’t enjoyed a book so much in a long time (and I read alot). From the very first paragraph I knew I was going to enjoy Behind the Scenes at the Museum; this book made me laugh and cry. The characters were all so real that I was desperate to know more about them, and I just love the way that the book jumps from present day to another time in the past of this strange but wonderfully fascinating family.

The story starts with the conception of Ruby Lennox in a drunken fumble with her parents in their House Above the Shop in York. Ruby narrates even before her birth and sets the scene with her family – a very disfunctional one at that. The second chapter then goes back in time to Ruby’s Great-Grandmother, Alice and her 5 children and from here on in we flit back and forth between Ruby’s life and those of her ancestors. All the characters in this book are so 3 dimensional it made me greedy to find out more about them and I found myself thinking about them even when I wasn’t reading at the time.

I’m so glad I picked this book up .I just LOVED, LOVED, LOVED this book and can’t recommend it highly enough.

 

Book Reviews: Sophie Kinsella – standalone books December 28, 2009

Filed under: Chick Lit,Comfort Reading,Laugh Out Loud,Sophie Kinsella — The Book Whisperer @ 7:38 pm

Sophie Kinesella is one of my favourite authors. Her books are funny and pure escapism. Here are the reviews for her standalone books (I will review the Shopaholic series separately).

 

Sophie Kinsella’s latest standalone book, Twenties Girl, is her best in my opinion. What an absolute treat this was to read. I took this on my holiday with me as I do like a good dose of chick-lit while relaxing in my sunlounger and Sophie Kinsella never lets me down.

This book was a delight from start to finish. It is narrated by Lara, newly dumped and struggling to run a business on her own. All she needs is to be pestered by the ghost of her Great Auntie Sadie whom she never even met but is here, larger than life, as a 23 year old dancing, drinking, fun-loving girl that only Lara can see and whom she insists help her find her necklace before she is buried without it.

The character of Sadie was just fabulous! One of the most endearing I have come across in a long time; she was such good fun. This book is my new favourite out of all the independents (i.e. not the shopaholic series). I love, love, loved it!

In Remember Me Lexi wakes up in hospital thinking that it is still 2004 and she is going out with Loser Dave, has wonky teeth, loads of friends and works in a low paid job in a carpet company. In fact it is 2007 and she is married to a gorgeous multi-millionaire, has perfect teeth, lives in a huge penthouse overlooing the Thames and has a high-flying job as a Director (oh, and she is the bitch-boss-from-hell), only Lexi can’t remember a thing about it. The story follows Lexi as she tries to fit in with her new life and fill in the gaps as to how she ended up where she did (and how she managed to alienate all her friends in the process).

All the ususal magic is here – young girl, a love interest (or two), nice clothes and shoes (v. important!)

While I agree that nothing can beat the Shopaholic series (who could replace Becky?), this is still a great book to get lost in. Thumbs up for Ms Kinsella once again.

 

 Can you Keep a Secret is such a funny book. I decided to work from home one day I ended up doing nothing other than curling up on the sofa and giggling my way through endless cups of tea until I had finnished the whole thing in a day – I know, I know, shhhhhh but I just couldn’t put the thing down!!!

A great idea for a story and a great heroine make this big-hearted book a real joy to read.  This was the first of all Kinsellas books that I read and it was the start of a love affair with all her books.

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I picked up Undomestic Godess  after having just read all the Shopaholic series back to back and loving them I just had to devour more of her books.

Samantha is a high flying, stressed out workaholic lawyer for a huge London firm and spends her every waking moment either working or thinking about work and that promotion to Partner she so desperately wants. On the day she is about to find out if she has made Partner or not, she discovers a document she has overlooked that will cost her client £50 million. In a daze, Samantha runs out of the office and ends up on a train without knowing where she’s going and ends up, quite by accident, ono the doorstep of a huge mansion. The owners then mistake Samantha for the Housekeeper they’ve been trying to hire and offer her the job on the spot.

To say that Samantha has no domestic skills whatsoever is an understatement but somehow she manages to muddle her way through (mainly by ordering sandwiches through a catering company and sending the laundry away to be ironed). Of course, there is a sexy gardner to liven up the plot too (which always helps).

I really enjoyed this book, I just love Sophie Kinsella. Her books are so readable, funny and once you pick them up you can’t put them down.

 

 

 

Book Reviews: James Herriot December 27, 2009

Filed under: Comfort Reading,James Herriot,Laugh Out Loud — The Book Whisperer @ 11:18 pm

It Shouldn't Happen to a Vet

If Only They Could Talk is the first book in this series of eight (I have the box set).

 What a wonderful trip down memory lane this book was. I remember watching the TV series back in the 70′s and 80′s and picking this book up for the first time was like settling down by the fire with old friends.
Set in the Yorkshire Dales, this is the first book in a series by rookie vet James Herriot and his new life in the countryside and among the animals and his struggle to win over the old Yorkshire farmers and eccentric characters he meets there. There were so many times when I literally laughed out loud (once in a quiet hospital corridor while waiting for someone to come out of the theatre – which got me a few horrified looks!). The character of Mrs Pumphrey and her dog Tricki Woo had me bent over crying with laughter!
I just loved this book. I live in Yorkshire, about an hour from the Dales, and it has made me want to jump in my car and head off to Herriot country; the whole place just came alive with his passion for the region. I am really looking forward to reading the rest in the series – this is the sort of comfort reading that I know I can look forward to if I need a break from real life. In the words of James Herriot while describing his beloved countryside – I felt like I could breathe. This book is a real tonic – highly recommended.

 

It Shouldn't Happen to a Vet

It Shoudln’t Happen to a Vet  is the second book in the series.

Oh how I love this series! This is pure comfort reading at its very best. I can’t remember the last time I laughed so hard reading a book. Picking up the books in this series is like catching up with a friend for a glass of red wine by the fire.
The characters are all so brilliantly drawn that I feel I know them all. To get to know about these burly Yorkshire farmers (with all their local dialect thrown in to boot) is a joy and a priviledge.

 

 

 

Book Review: Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier December 12, 2009

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Historical,Tracy Chevalier — The Book Whisperer @ 12:57 pm

I loved this book so much I didn’t want it to end. I met Tracy Chevalier at a book promo in Hawarth, Yorkshire (Bronte country) and she read an excerpt from this book and I knew then that I was in for a treat. The author was great too; really down to earth and answered all questions about her previous work and inspirations etc.

Based on the real-life characters of Mary Anning and Elizabeth Philpot in the early 19th century, Remarkable Creatures is a story of two pioneering women in the coastal town of Lyme Regis who discover some of the most amazing fossils ever found and who influence scientific thinking around the possiblility that extinction may exist and who also discovered the fossils of previously unknown prehistoric animals. So little is known about these characters becuase of the fact that they were women in a time when it was thought that science was a mans game. In fact, Mary is only mentioned briefly in a science paper years later. The relationship between Mary and Elizabeth is such a charming one too due to the fact that there is almost a 20 year age gap and Elizabeth is a well-off spinster and Mary is an uneducated working class girl. What brings them together is their love of the great outdoors, fossil hunting and discovery. Elizabeth is also later instrumental in getting Mary some of the recognition she deserves for her finds.

I am a huge Tracy Chevalier fan and this book just reinforced all the reasons why. This book was a joy to read from start to finish and I could have read on for another 300 pages easily. I highly recommend!

Other books of Chevaliers that I have read and also highly recommend are:

 

Girl with a Pearl Earring
Virgin Blue
 I still have two more of hers to read (Burning Bright and The Lady and the Unicorn) both of which I am looking forward to.
Tracy Chevalier also told us at the reading a brief outline of the next book she will write and it sounds amazing! Hope we don’t have to wait too long.

 

 

 

Book Review: Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte December 12, 2009

Filed under: Charlotte Bronte,Comfort Reading,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 12:49 pm
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte

Wow! Just wow!

I was a latecomer to Jane Eyre and I often wonder what the hell took me so long. This book is amazing from start to finish and I found myself thinking about it whenever I couldn’t get to it to carry on reading.

Jane Eyre is a fantastic character and I had more than a few laugh-out-loud moments with her. My favourite being when the school governer tell her she is naughty and asks how she can stop being burned in the pits of hell to which she replies “I must keep in good health, and not die.” Genius!

The story of Jane Eyre spans over a decade and we follow her from her first home as an orphan in her rich relatives home where they treat her as an outcast, through boarding school for orphan girls and on to work as a governess where she meets Mr Rochester.

The whole books is beautifully written and engaging and I never once found a dull moment.

This is one book that I will be going back to again and again, I’m sure, and it is in my top 5 of all time.

 

Book Review: The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins December 12, 2009

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,The Victorians,Wilkie Collins — The Book Whisperer @ 12:31 pm

Chilling, thrilling, mysterious and very dramatic! A mysterious figure, a woman in white, appears out of nowhere on a London street at midnight – she is running away from someone or something. The only person she meets on that lonely road is Walter Hartright, an Art teacher, and little does he know it but he is about to have his life tured upside down. Mysterious letters, ghostly figures by gravesides, kidnapping and poison all follow through the next 700 pages and not a word is wasted! Narrated by several different characters, all portraying their their own experiences, the reader sees the story unfolding before them.

Written as a serialised stroy in a weekly newspaper in 1860, you can almost hear the curtain falling and the audience gasping at the end of each chapter. I could just imagie myself waiting excitedly for each installment to come out to find out what happens next just as they would have when it was published. For a victorian novel, The Woman in White is incredibly fast paced with some of the best characters I have ever come across.

I just loved this book from start to finish. This is what a book should be – something that makes you think about it when you can’t get to it and excited to pick it up again. Bravo Mr Collins!! I can’t wait to read more of your work.

 

Book Review: On the Street where you Live by Mary Higgins Clark December 11, 2009

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,Mary Higgins Clark — The Book Whisperer @ 2:54 pm
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51oJtCvMtXL._SL500_AA240_.jpg

This was the perfect good ole-fashioned whodunnit to read while being wrapped up in the front of the fire poorly. I am pretty new to Mary Higgins Clark but I now know that she can be completely and utterly relied on for comfort reading.
Emily Graham moves in to her ansestoral home in Spring Lake, NJ knowing that over 100 years ago a family member was murdered in that very town. In the following years, two more of her ancestors friends were also murdered and the town now appears to have a copycat murdered over a century later with young girls disappearing on the same dates. The last date that fits with the older crimes is less than a week ago so there is a race against time to find the perpertrator before he strikes again.
As with all MHG’s books, there are suspects aplently and you soon learn that, true to form, it could be anyone of them. I love the fact that her books have no gratuitous gore in them, just an old- fashioned whodunnit. I enjoy her books in the same way that I enjoy Agatha Christie’s; you know what you’re getting and can rely on them.

 

 

Book Review: Shiver by Maggie Shiefvater December 11, 2009

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Maggie Stiefvater,Paranormal,Young Adult — The Book Whisperer @ 1:48 pm
 Grace was attacked by a pack of wolves when she was eleven years old. She was dragged from her back garden which back onto Boundry Woods. But she didn’t struggle or cry even though she could see her own blood in the snow: instead what she remembers about that day is the wolf who saved her. The wolf with the yellow eyes who looked right at her and dragged the other wolves off her.
Over the next six years, Grace becomes obssessed with the wolves in Mercy Falls, where she lives. But it’s the one with the yellow eyes who she seeks out. On the occasions when he’s appeared at the edge of her garden they watch each other, waiting. One day, a local boy from her school is attacked by wolves and dies and the town is in uproar and a party of men go hunting the wolves in the woods. When Grace returns home she finds a naked boy about her age on her porch who has been shot. She takes him inside and recognises him instantly – the yellow eyes, Sam.

What follows is a love story between two people who have “known” each other for years. It’s simple, tender and subtle. They are drawn together and can’t be apart, but there is something in their way – whenever it gets cold, Sam changes back into a wolf and this year there is a race against time to stop him changing as Sam thinks it may be his last year as a human.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I can absolutely see how it would appeal to teenagers but I think it’s a good one for adults too. It’s touching and tender. I am looking forward to reading LINGER, the next in the series when it’s out.

 

 
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