Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up
18 July 2021
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Booking Ahead, Caffeinated Reviewer, Weekly wrap up

I’m trying to get back into the habit of doing a round-up of the week just completed and also take a look at my plans for the forthcoming week. I rather got out of the habit of doing this last year but I would like to reinstate this type of post as I feel it keeps me on track. So, I’m linking up to The Sunday Post over at Kimberly’s Caffeinated Reviewer. Without further ado:
Last week:
So, this week was a bit slow for me. I was feeling a bit miserable for one reason or another. Consequently all my reading and blogging took a bit of a back seat. I managed to pick up and complete The Retreat by Elisabeth de Mariaffi which is a closed room murder mystery set up in a remote retreat isolated further by stormy weather. I enjoyed it – it certainly had plenty of atmosphere. I’ve also picked up the second book from this month’s SPFBO batch which I’m about 50% into. All told, slow week aside, I think this month I should be able to complete all my review books and my four SPFBO books *fingers crossed*.
I’m aiming to complete Empire’s Ruin by Brian Staveley and pick up The 22 Murders of Madison May by Max Barry. I won’t make more ambitious plans for now:
Reviews Posted since last Sunday:
- Meet Me in Another Life by Catriona Silvey
- A Dark and Secret Place by Jen Williams
Forthcoming Reviews:
- Murder of Crows by Anne Bishop
- The Past is Red by Catherynne M Valente
- Berserker by Dimitrios Gkirgkiris
- The Retreat by Elisabeth de Mariaffi
Meet Me in Another Life by Catriona Silvey
Mr Five Word TL:DR Review : Took me completely by surprise

Meet Me in Another Life is a book that will defy your expectations, it will feel familiar, you’ll think you’ve got it nailed down, you’ll know exactly what’s going on here (well, sort of) right up until that moment of revelation when the author shows you that you knew nothing at all. In between times, before that moment of disclosure, we have a story, that feels like a tale of reincarnation two people born again and again into each other’s timeline, playing different roles each time, lovers, teacher and student, parent and child, and then some more. They’re not always born in the same place, there is constantly a disparity in where they find themselves, and yet, inexplicably they are drawn together through a shared desire to know more. Let’s start at the beginning.
As the story kicks off we meet Thora and Santi in what appears to be their first meeting. It doesn’t go particularly well and to an extent this is something that will be repeated over and over again in a kind of Groundhog Day style. Don’t be put off though, sometimes they live full lives – not always together but always kind of in orbit around each other.
Now, I’m not going to say anything more about the story because, and I know I use this a lot, but it really could lead to spoilers and seriously you need to read this with as little knowledge beforehand as possible as that will only play more into the intrigue.
So, what can I discuss here today. Well, a few things.
Overall feelings. I liked this very much, I particularly like it given the ending – which isn’t to say I didn’t like the earlier chapters – just that the ending gives you a whole new bunch of things to think about plus a desire to backtrack and see what you missed along the way because you can rest assured that there is a trail of breadcrumbs just waiting to be pecked up by those hungry enough to pay attention. I confess, I didn’t have the slightest notion so there we go – what can I say, I missed the breadcrumbs.
Characters. Well, if you love characters that are well developed you’ll love these two. Let’s just be honest, the author has a lot of opportunity to teach us different aspects to their nature, to show them in a good light or a not so good light. To reinvent them on a constant basis but with enough consistencies to make them familiar to us in every iteration. It’s fantastic really because it plays into the whole ethos of just how well can you really know someone? How long does it take to really know that person? A lifetime – well, Thora and Santi have a whole bunch of lifetimes and they’re still learning about each other at the end of the book.
The setting. Another really cool part of this – both characters are repeatedly drawn to the same place. It’s like a force or irrepressible magnetism that they simply can’t deny. Set in Cologne we find ourselves visiting over and over to such an extent that it becomes familiar, I feel like I could see the streets, the bars, the clock tower in my own mind.
Let’s not get away from those certain little things that are familiar. Sometimes ‘familiar’ is comforting and there are definitely elements here that will feel like ‘things’ you know. Obviously the constant reincarnations have a Life After Life feel. The way that the two characters arrive at different points and places kind of reminded me a little of The Time Traveller’s Wife, the repetitive nature of certain aspects could be likened to Groundhog Day, the little inconsistencies experienced in each episode – well, I’m sure you can see where I’m going with this. There are undeniably familiar elements to this story but not only does it stand on it’s own two feet – primarily because of this winning combination between science and theology that is constantly discussed and argued by Thora and Santi, one determined to believe in fate and miracles, the other sticking to science and proven things together – but, it evolves in a direction that I never saw coming.
On top of this, the story is packed with emotion which persists right up to the ending where… well, you’ll just have to read it and find out for yourself.
In terms of criticisms. Okay, well, firstly, I cannot deny that this feels like a series of short stories with recurring characters. Now, I’m not a lover of short stories so this could have become very old very fast for me, however, I think the author managed to get the timing perfect in that just as I was starting to feel a little ‘same old/same old’ she started to throw in changes and this is when the real mystery began. The same thing could also be said of the repetitive nature of certain elements – this definitely had the capacity to become tiresome and yet I didn’t find it to be so because the author makes subtle changes all the time which lent it a fascinating aspect.
So criticisms. that aren’t really criticisms at all, put to one side. Yes, this was a very good, entertaining, mysterious, fascinating and slightly heartbreaking read.
I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.
The above is my own opinion.
My rating 4.5 of 5 stars
A Dark and Secret Place by Jen Williams
My Five Word TL:DR Review : A Little Slow to Start

A Dark and Secret Place is the first foray into thriller/mystery by an author whose body of fantasy work I love and as such this was also an impressive book although I didn’t love it quite as much as the author’s other books.
As the book begins we make the gruesome discovery of a dead woman, the body mutilated and staged in the horrific style used previously by the notorious serial killer Michael Reeve, known as The Red Wolf, except Reeve was caught and has been in prison since.
At the same time we meet Heather Evans. Heather is returning to her family home. A home she left as a teenager and hasn’t visited since. Heather and her mother shared a strained relationship and Heather’s return has been brought about by the sad news that her mother has commited suicide. Heather struggles to understand why her mother would take her own life, the suicide note itself is puzzling, but when she discovers a stack of letters between her mother and the serial killer the plot thickens.
Heather takes the letters to the police and becomes caught up in the hunt for a copycat killer – involving visits to the Red Wolf himself to try and discover if he is involved.
The story is told in two timelines. We have Heather’s current timeline and we jump back to a young version of Michael.
This one does get off to a fairly slow start but I didn’t have a problem with the pace to be honest. It slowly becomes obvious that Heather is the centre of something very odd. She finds strange things in the house, there’s a creepy vibe to the place and sightings of a stranger lurking in the rear garden. To be honest I don’t think I could have stayed there so Heather was certainly a lot braver than I would have been. Clearly somebody was leaving these ‘mysterious’ things for her and there was a tension about this element to the tale that was decidedly spooky.
The flashbacks to Michael were also a bit unnerving and dark in nature but I’m not going to discuss those here.
We also have the visits to prison where Heather visits with Michael in a desperate bid by the police to uncover anything about the new murderer. The visits don’t turn out to be terribly helpful with Michael often behaving rather obtuse, spouting stories that resemble gruesome fairytales. Michael has a very strange intensity to him that was a little unnerving and I couldn’t help having this odd ‘Silence of the Lambs’ vibe.
The story escalates when Heather decides to take matters into her own hands and the final revelations become a little frantic.
I liked this one, there are some good ideas here and the story is well delivered. However, I didn’t love this one and I’m not sure that I can put my finger on why that is. I think on the face of it I struggled to connect with Heather. She could be a little bit prickly and in spite of her obvious intelligence she made some very dubious and risky decisions. I was mystified by one of her decisions in particular but,again, I won’t elaborate.
I think my slight hesitation in falling for this was a slight disparity between the first half of the book and the second They didn’t seem to gel as well as I would have liked. The ending had an almost chaotic feel with all sorts of elements being woven into the storyline. And the really odd thing is that now, reflecting on the story itself to write this review I struggle to recall some of the final revelations which is a really strange experience for me.
Overall, though, I did like this, it was a very easy read, gripping in fact, and I would love to see what the author comes up with next.
I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.
My rating 3.5 of 5 stars.

The middle book (top row) did make me laugh. The book on the left (top row) I quite like but it doesn’t seem to fit as well as the original somehow. The cover with the cupcakes made me feel squicky (thanks 





