Monthly Wrap Up/What’s On My Plate April/May

I’m trying to post a wrap up for the end of each month, mainly to help me to keep track of my reading and at the same time look at what I’m intending to read during the month ahead (inspired by Books Bones and Buffy’s What’s on My Plate.

In this post I shall be looking at the reading I completed for April and what I’m hoping to read during May.

Here’s what I read during April:

  1. The Gathering by CJ Tudor
  2. The Fates by Rosie Garland
  3. When She Was Good by Michael Robotham
  4. The Library Thief by Kuchenga Shenjé
  5. The Hungry Dark by Jen Williams
  6. The Redemption of Morgan Bright by Chris Panatier
  7. You are Here by David Nicholls
  8. The Silverblood Promise by James Logan
  9. Lying Beside You by Michael Robotham
  10. The Puppet Master by Sam Holland

So I managed to read all my review books last month and have just three reviews to catch up with.  I caught up with two books from the Cyrus Haven series and I’m about 50% into my backlist book.  In other news SPFBO 9 has concluded and the winner is Murder at Spindle Manor by Morgan Stang.  This is a great book so if you’re looking for a fantasy mystery with some quirky characters and a slice of chaos, give this a go.  I’ll be posting a round up post for SPFBO soon and talking about the other books.

What I’m hoping to read during May.

  1. The Silence Factory by Bridget Collins
  2. The House That Horror Built by Christina Henry
  3. Hera by Jennifer Saint
  4. Elusive by Genevieve Cogman
  5. Moonstone by Laura Purcell
  6. Cinderwich by Cherie Priest
  7. Backlist book
  8. Backlist book

As with last month, I think this should be manageable and if all goes to plan I’m hoping to squeeze in a couple of backlist titles.BTB

I haven’t completed my book for April but I’m about 50/60% through so should complete in the next couple of days.

Bookforager‘s Picture Prompt book bingo

PPBBC

This month I’m again ticking two books off my Picture Prompt bingo card.  Firstly, for the cannon picture I’m using The Warm Hands of Ghosts by Katherine Arden.  This is a fantastic book set during WW1 and so fits the prompt perfectly.  My second picture is for the armillary sphere.  The sphere was used by ancient Greeks as an astronomical tool therefore I’m going to use The Fates by Rosie Garland which is all about Greek mythology and a story when The Fates try to intervene and stop their meddling once and for all.

PICTURE PROMPT BOOK BINGO 2024 (TEXT VERSION)

A heeled shoe decorated with a bow A microscope A partially unrolled scroll and a pen A land snail
An old Roman coin A fern plant A simple crown An armillary sphere
A seashell A cannon on a gun carriage A harp (one of the big ones) Two hands making a shadow puppet dog
An old camera and tripod A dog (a very good doggo) A beehive (with four bees flying around it) Fluffy cumulonimbus clouds

How did you get on during April?

The Friday Face Off: You Are Here by David Nicholls

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 my book is a recent read that I shall be reviewing next week.  You Are Here by David Nicholls.  Perhaps not my typical read but I read One Day by this author many years ago and so wanted to give this a try.  Anyway, here are the covers:

My favourite this week:

Yah

It’s a no-brainer for me this week.  I don’t dislike the other covers but this is reminiscent of an older style novel somehow, I don’t know, I simply like it.

Which is your favourite?

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

The Silverblood Promise (The Last Legacy #1) by James Logan

My Five Word TL:DR Review: Hooks you with Indecent Haste

Silverblood

I really enjoyed The Silverblood Promise.  It just worked really well for me.  The writing is smooth.  The characters are easy to become attached to.  There’s the whole mystery and saving the CIty element to the story which never became dull.  The setting was easy to imagine.  And, well, it was very entertaining with this really easy going style of banter and bluff going on between the MC and his companions.

So, as the story begins we meet Lukan Gardova.  Lukan is the disgraced son of a noble family fallen on hard times.  Basically, they have little cash but they compensate by having a long history that keeps them in good stead, that is until Lukan’s actions result in his expulsion from the Academy he attends and a life on the move, estranged from his father and living a life not dissimilar to that of an outlaw.  Lukan is set on a path of wine, women, and cards until his father’s trusty retainer seeks him out with the sad news of his father’s demise.  Lukan will never have the chance to make amends and the pill is made more bitter to swallow with the knowledge that his father was murdered.  However, in his dying moments his father wrote a letter to his son, three words, written in his own blood that will set Lukan on a strange journey in search of answers.

This is very enjoyable and a great start to a series.  Let’s have a look at what worked well for me:

The world building was great – and in fact the City we spend most of our time in was fascinating.  There’s the sort of attention to detail that bring the place to life without being clunky or purple.  Just little snippets of religion, festivals, the way people live, the huge disparity between the rich and the poor that make this a rich and believable place.  There’s a tall tower set within the sea where criminals are taken, we soon learn that this is run by the much feared Inquisitors.  We have the merchant princes who control everything that takes place, corrupt religious officials who don’t practice what they preach and a twice crowned king of the underworld, nobody so much as picks a pocket in this city without giving him his tithe.

I really liked the characters.  Lukan is a lovable and cheeky rogue with a heart of gold.  His journey has him racing round the City in search of clues, usually as one door closes another opens and frequently this takes him on a new magical mystery tour that he must solve before he can get any further with his own quest.  I will say that Lukan is very easy to read and what makes this more so is that he isn’t perhaps as good as he thinks. He can use a sword but he’s perhaps not the best and he sometimes just runs headlong into trouble.  So, he’s not perfect and that goes for the rest of this cast.  He is fairly quickly joined by a sassy street urchin known as Flea.  She’s a great character, talks too much, but is endearing and her tough early years have given her a hard outer edge.  Yes, this is an obvious and frequently used trope, it allows our MC to travel around easily (because he has a knowledgeable companion) and it gives us an ongoing commentary that delivers other snippets of information but, it succeeds  because the two work so well together.  There are plenty of other characters along the way and they all felt distinct which is a really winning element of the story for me.

I loved the locations we travel on with Lukan.  His journey sees him conning his way into a place that most people are trying to escape from, creeping through the dark and creepy catacombs and being chased by a huge magical wolf.  Well, I won’t go into everything else because you need to read and discover these things for yourself.

Basically, if you love a fantasy story with great world building, characters that jump off the page, funny banter and plenty of entertainment, a murder mystery that morphs into so much more and offers plenty of promise for the future, portals, magic and strange ‘faceless’ ones, don’t wait any longer – do yourself a favour and jump on this series now.  Yes, right now.  You know you don’t want to get left behind and this first in series has ended on a perfect note with a great set up for the next book that promises a whole new location and an entirely different mystery for Lukan to solve.

In terms of criticisms.  Well, I don’t know, I might have had some along the way but to be honest I was enjoying myself too much to give them much thought and I didn’t make any notes – either good or bad – I simply read.

An impressive debut – my only problem now – waiting for No.2.

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

Can’t Wait Wednesday : The Trouble With Mrs Montgomery Hurst by Katie Lumsden

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 Trouble With Mrs Montgomery Hurst by Katie Lumsden.  I enjoyed the first book I read by this author, The Secrets of Hartwood Hall.  Here’s the description and cover:

TTWMM

1841. Mr Montgomery Hurst of Radcliffe Park is getting married. To the great consternation of the county of Wickenshire, he is not marrying the daughter of an earl, but an impoverished widow with three children, whom nobody has ever heard of. Society is both appalled and intrigued.

Nobody is more curious than Mr Ashpoint, a wealthy local brewer, who had hoped Mr Hurst might choose his daughter, Amelia, as his bride. Only, Amelia has no interest in marrying Mr Hurst – or indeed in marrying at all.

Mr Hurst’s marriage kicks off a series of events, as it becomes clear his business is everyone’s but his own…

Expected publication : July 2024

The Puppet Master by Sam Holland (Major Crimes #3)

My Five Word TL:DR Review : Fast Paced, Dark and Brutal

TPM

Another winning Major Crimes story from Sam Holland.

In this story we return to DCI Cara Elliott and her brother Griffin (Nate) after taking a spin with another DCi for the second in series, The Twenty.  I’m loving this series so far.  The pacing is good, the stories are always compelling and I like the character work.  I would say that each novel in the series is a standalone and you don’t need to read the others (although you might miss a little character development if you jump in straight at this point).  That being said, the author does a good job of explaining things in a smooth way that blends seamlessly into the story.

Cara and her brother first made their appearance for The Echo Man, a gruesome tale of a serial killer that was bloody and brutal.  This story starts in a different fashion.  The team are asked to take a look at what appears to be a suicide, but things don’t quite add up and Cara is concerned by some troubling niggles, which increase substantially when a couple more suicides occur in quick succession.

I don’t really want to give anything away for this one as it’s best read with as little knowledge as possible so instead let’s look at what I enjoyed.

The pacing.  This series could be known as the ‘fast and furious’.  The plot moves forward at a terrific pace and I sometimes wonder if this is part of a cunning plan by the author to give the reader little chance to sit and ponder.  The storyline is also compelling.  It’s one of those stories that I’d like to say I enjoyed but it doesn’t feel like the right word at all – given the nature of some of the deaths in this (and also beware – there are plenty of TWs amongst these pages) – I think I’d say unputdownable instead.

It was really good to return to Cara and Griffin.  I liked the way they worked together tbh and hope that we see them in action again in future episodes.  Both of them are struggling with their own demons but at the same time are coming to understand that they can trust each other – it was a nice element to the story that worked well.  The team are under enormous strain.  The unit is depleted and everyone is stressed out.  It’s difficult to recruit to the team (for reasons that could be spoilery for previous books so I won’t mention) and the full situation feels like an accident waiting to happen.  As it is, they all manage to hold it together as they’re pulled from pillar to post following the strangest trail of breadcrumbs.

The setting is fairly small scale – which I liked.  The deaths here, whilst they initially feel unconnected, it soon appears that there are small similarities that begin to occur and although some of the characters are unknown to each other they move in very similar circles.

In terms of criticisms.  Well, not really a criticism but these stories are all a little over the top in some ways, I don’t think they always stick to reality and there are always plenty of twists.  I don’t mind this at all to be honest but thought it worth mentioning.

Also, as stated above this book can feel disturbingly brutal.  These murders are unapologetically grim so bear that in mind.

To round up, I thoroughly enjoyed The Puppet Master in fact I’d say it was my favourite of the series so far.

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

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