Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up

Sunday Post

Books read this week:

This week I’ve had a good time.  I actually had my last language class and so that will definitely free up some free time for reading and blogging.  I also completed Vianne by Joanne Harris.  I read The Vengeance by Emma Newman and I also started The Malevolent Eight by Sebastien de Castell.  I must say that my reading has been a bit hit and miss recently – I think it’s a mood thing – so I do have a few books that I’ve put down because they simply weren’t fitting my mood and I do intend to return to them.

Next Week’s Reads:

I will definitely be picking up We Live Here Now by Sarah Pinborough.  Also, The Listeners by Maggie Stiefvater and I’d like to finish my current audio book which is Victorian Psycho by Virginia Feito (which I’m really enjoying).

Reviews Posted:

  1. Vianne by Joanne Harris
  2. The House of Frost and Feathers by Lauren Wiesebron

Outstanding Reviews

Friday Face Off: Forget Me Not by Stacy Willingham

FFO

Today I’m returning to the  Friday Face Off, originally created by Books by Proxy).  I’ve missed these for the past few months and so would like to get back to comparing covers (and hopefully I will be updating this page with a new banner.  This is an opportunity to look at a book of your choice and shine the spotlight on the covers.  Of course this only works for those books that have alternative covers (although sometimes I use this to look at a series of books to choose a favourite). . So, if you have a book that has alternative covers, highlight them and choose your favourite.  If you’re taking part it would be great if you leave a link so I can take a look at what you’ve chosen.

This week I’ve chosen a book that I’ve not read yet but I’m really looking forward to, Forget Me Not by Stacy Willingham.

Here are the covers:

My favourite this week:

I like both covers to be honest.  But, I like that at first glance I barely Noticed the car grill and headlight amongst the greenery.

Which is your favourite?

Join me next week in highlighting one of your reads with different covers.

Can’t Wait Wednesday: The Cold House by AG Slatter

CWW

“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme that was originally created by Breaking the Spine.  Unfortunately Breaking the Spine are no longer hosting so I’m now linking my posts up to Wishful Endings Can’t Wait Wednesday. Don’t forget to stop over, link up and check out what books everyone else is waiting for.  If you want to take part, basically, every Wednesday, we highlight a book that we’re really looking forward to.  This week my book is: The Cold House by AG Slatter.  I love her books!  Here’s the cover and description:

When Everly’s husband and young daughter die in a car crash she finds out nothing is quite what she thought… Secrets, lies and grief collide in this funny, tragic, intimate and utterly compelling horror novella from the award-winning author. Perfect for fans of Rachel Harrison, Delilah S. Dawson, Sarah Gailey and Sarah-Maria Griffin.

Writer Everly Bainbridge’s life is left in ruins when her husband takes their child to the supermarket one day and a lorry collides with their car. After the accident, a lawyer appears on her doorstep and tells her her husband was not who he said he was and she is a very rich widow. She retreats to a lonely house in the countryside to recover. But there’s a well in the cellar, a spectacularly cold room, and one night, Everly wakes up with a foot hanging over the emptiness of the well and the echo of her daughter’s voice in her ears…

A short, sharp, emotionally layered story of horrific secrets and dangerous lies, this dark, fierce gem of a novella will keep you turning the pages late into the night…

Expected publication: October 2025

Review: Vianne (Chocolat, #0) by Joanne Harris

My Five Word TL:DR Review: Just the Most Delicious Book

I don’t think I can do this book justice in a review but I’ll give it a try.  In a nutshell, I loved this book.  Think of all the most lovely words you can imagine, delicious, scrumptious, whimsical, beautiful, delightful, a joy to read, and then times them by ten and that’s my experience reading this book.

This book actually brings to us Vianne’s story, long anticipated and now arrived to tantalise us with decadent chocolate, breathtaking recipes and a story of found family all embellished with a little magical realism.  We learn about Vianne and her past and the time she spends in Marseille before finally opening her chocolaterie in Lansquenet.

Firstly, I would say that if you haven’t read any of the books from this series this book is the perfect start of the journey.  You can certainly read this as a standalone and maybe if you pick this one up you’ll know whether or not you want to continue the rest of the journey.

Secondly Vianne is a wonderful character.  She isn’t perfect, she makes mistakes but her heart is in the right place.  She’s torn between following the path set by her mama and wanting to forge her own course.  And, in this addition she is in the very early stages of pregnancy.  Vianne has a way of bringing light into other’s lives – usually she doesn’t stay around long enough to affect such changes, usually eager to make an exit before she’s caught by darkness.

Thirdly, the writing is exquisite.  It’s so evocative.  You can smell the aromas, the descriptions of the places, the scents.  But, I warn you, you may need cake, warm chocolate and other little delights because this book will surely test you and make you want to delve into hand made treats.  I mean, quite literally, I’ve spent the last three days with a loudly grumbling stomach.

I loved the story.  Vianne finds shelter at a jaded bistrot under the care of its owner Louis.  Louis has been in mourning for many years since his pregnant wife passed away.  His little kitchen and the book of recipes his wife annotated have remained the same since but he reluctantly allows Vianne into this little shrine to begin to learn how to cook.  Vianne spends her first month in Marseille between the little bistrot that is slowly coming back to life with the delicious aromas on the wind tempting customers through the doors and with a couple of friends she has made who are endeavouring to open a chocolaterie, where Vianne discovers her love for chocolate and the magic it helps to achieve.

This is not an action packed read with adventure and disasters around every corner.  It’s an exploration into, not only Vianne’s but, the lives of the people she encounters and the little changes that gradually come about to help them come alive again.  There is sadness here.  Both for Vianne and Louis.  Vianne wants to stay true to her mother, to run before attachments are formed and roots pull her down but she wants to make a difference too.  You can really see elements of the woman she is about to become and I really enjoyed reading her story.

In conclusion, if you haven’t read any of the Chocolat series this is a perfect place to start.  If you’re already a fan then prepare to be happy because Vianne is an absolute delight.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

My rating 5 out of 5 deliciously sweet stars

The House of Frost and Feathers by Lauren Wiesebron

My Five Word TL:DR Review: Lovely writing, good ideas, slow.

My review for the House of Frost and Feathers is very overdue and I do feel terribly guilty.  Things just got away from me and I became all wrapped up on completing my SPFBO books and trying not to fall behind.

Anyway, here we are.  I enjoyed The House of Frost and Feathers, the writing is lovely, I really liked the House which was virtually a character in it’s own right and I liked the characters.  But. This is not a fast read.  It’s not the type of story that you’re simply going to pick up and complete in two sittings and to be totally fair for a while there it felt like very little was going on at all which did lead me to put the book down and sometimes hesitate to pick it back up straight away.  That being said I really enjoyed the writing and will certainly keep my eye on this author to see what she does next.

The main character is called Marisha.  Her parents have fallen victim to the sleeping plague that attacks every ten years.  Marisha has run from home to escape her aunt’s plans to marry her off to a wealthy suitor and with very few alternatives she manages to snag herself a place as an assistant to Baba Zima’s apprentice in a house that moves from place to place upon chicken legs!

Baba Zima is a woman of magic, who travels from place to place assisting people who need her help and still believe in magic.  Her apprentice Olena is trying to find a cure for the plague and her and Marisha, having this desire in common, decide to try and help each other.

So, what worked for me with The House of Frost and Feathers.

The story is based on Slavic folklore and although it seems to be an age where people are not believing in magic quite as much as they did in the past there is still enough people in search of magical aid.  Baba Zima is a wily one, quite powerful and very secretive.  She controls the house – speaking of which, I loved this aspect of the story.  The house itself is a great creation.  It’s a fanciful place, sometimes it has a different layout, sometimes it permits people to pass through certain doorways and other times it doesn’t.

I enjoyed the characters.  There’s very much a found family feel and the book takes it’s time letting the reader discover them.  This does have a ‘slice of life’ feel to the story which definitely affects the pacing.   I actually really enjoyed the earlier chapters.  It has a lovely fairytale feel.

I did have a good time reading The House of Frost and Feathers but I did have some issues.  The slow pacing wasn’t really a problem for me in fact I preferred the earlier chapters to the grand finale when the pacing stepped up.  I wasn’t totally convinced with the direction that things took, the ending felt a little rushed even.

That being said, I did enjoy this and I’m definitely keen 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

 

 

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