For the love of a good book

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme where every Tuesday we look at a particular topic for discussion and use various (or more to the point ten) bookish examples to demonstrate that particular topic. Top Ten Tuesday (created and hosted by The Broke and Bookish) is now being hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl and future week’s topics can be found here. This week’s topic is:
Things I’ve Done for the Love of Books
The full title was ‘crazy things I’ve done’ – I wouldn’t particularly call these crazy. This is books. “It’s a dangerous business, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don’t take a good book there’s no knowing what trouble you might end up in. Here are a few of the things I’ve done for the love of books:
- Ignored people – I know. I feel guilty but I use public transport a lot and reading a book is almost like magical protection. When I start reading I’m not going to end up making eye contact with somebody who wants to become my best friend! I’ve got enough best friends thank you. And I’m reading. Stop asking me ‘is it a good book’, ‘what’s it about’, etc, etc. I’ve started wearing earphones as well just to really deter people. What is up with me. Send help
- Made up excuses not to socialise so that I can stay in and finish a book. However, I think this is perfectly normal – I get anxious when I’m near the end of the book. I don’t want to be social – I want to finish that book. I need to know how it all ends. I can go out another time.
- Cajoled, begged and bullied all my friends and family into buying vouchers for gifts. I don’t know why everyone has such a problem with this. Stop buying me toiletries, socks and knick-knacks. I have enough already! Please buy me vouchers. Vouchers = guilt free book buying. They’re a real indulgence and they make me feel so happy. Why don’t people want me to be happy?
- Forgotten to sleep. I am a bit of a sleep monster to be honest so this isn’t good. I’m an absolute bear with a sore head in the mornings and I have to have two cups of coffee before I even speak to anybody. Grumpy – pah, I taught that chap everything he knows about being grumpy and he’s still not quite up to my standard. But, reading has the opposite effect on me to most people. It doesn’t make me tired – it wakes me up. And I always take a book to read at night – I’m going wrong somewhere.
- Bought more than two copies of the same book. Now, in my defence, sometimes the book covers change so it’s not like I pick up two of the same version (well, not always). The last time I sorted through my shelves I found at least three copies of one particular book. The irony was – I still hadn’t read the book although clearly I adored the blurb enough to buy it every time I picked it up.
- Small white lies. Just iddy biddy little ones. Yes, I tell fibs if I’ve been book buying. Some people do the same thing with shoes and clothes – if my other half asks me about a book I say I’ve had it for ages. Ahem. I have no regrets.
- I have been known to maybe mistreat my books a little. I don’t tend to dog ear pages but I do carry books in my bag quite often and they get bashed around. And, I have broken the spine of a book more than once because it was bound so tight I could barely open the pages to read it. I’ve also spilled wine on a book – sacrilege in more ways than one, and I’ve even dropped a book, or two in the bath. What can I say, my books have a ‘lived in’ look but then so do I.
- Spent a whole day reading when I had so many other things to do. One of those days where you have the best intentions. You’ve taken the day off and you have plenty of things that you’ve been thinking about doing. Then you crack open a new book. The next thing you know, you realise that the dark night is closing in, you need to switch on the lamps, you’ve not eaten, and the whole day has flown by.
- Read the ending. Okay, I don’t do this anymore. But I used to. I would start reading, become invested in the characters and have to read the end. It’s not something that really worked out well for me because (1) reading the ending of a book can sometimes be misleading (2) if it’s not the ending I wanted then I’d go into a slump (3) it kills the tension of the story. I don’t do this anymore – I don’t really know why. I don’t recall making a conscious effort to stop but somewhere along the line I just did.
- Having far too many books. I think at this particular point in time, and even going off a best guess estimate of reading, say, 100 books a year, I don’t think I would need to buy any more books for at least ten years and I still wouldn’t run out. And yet, I keep collecting more. I have a problem. I also have no interest in curing that problem.
Weekly Wrap Up : 7th April 2019
I hope you’re all having a good week. My reading plans have been a bit skewed this week as I’ve been out A LOT. Much socialising and catching up = little reading. So, I’ve read (and really enjoyed) The Binding and I’m about a third of the way through (and already really caught up in the story) John Gwynne’s a Time of Blood:
My books:
- The Binding by Bridget Collins

Next week’s reads:
- A Time of Blood by John Gwynne
- One Word Kill by Mark Lawrence
- Emily Eternal by M G Wheaton
Upcoming reviews:
- Aching God (Iconoclasts #1) by Mike Shel
- Sowing (The Purification Era #1) by Angie Grigaliunas
- The Binding by Bridget Collins
I’d love to know what you’re reading this week.
Author Interview : Sarah Chorn : Seraphina’s Lament (The Bloodlands #1)
Today I’m very pleased to welcome Sarah Chorn to my blog. Sarah has published her first book, Seraphina’s Lament which is enjoying some amazing reviews and is a book that I look forward to picking up soon. Check out the lovely cover:

Hi Sarah,
Firstly, can you tell readers a little bit about yourself, something not directly available on your ‘about me’ page?
Hmm. This one is tricky for me because there really isn’t much to me. So, here’s a thing that people don’t know. I am an avid, obsessive piano player. I’ve been playing for 27 years now. I used to play in concerts and stuff, but now I just play in my house. It relaxes me. When I’m really stressed out, or trying to untangle some problem with my writing, I turn to my piano. I can (and have) lost track of time playing, only to realize I’ve spent six hours on it.
I’m pea green with envy – I would love to be able to play the piano! Chopsticks is about the only thing I can manage.
Your new book Seraphina’s Lament is receiving some very impressive reviews already and I’m really looking forward to picking a copy up myself. If you were to have a random conversation about your book with a complete stranger, what is the ‘hook’ that you would use to tempt them into picking it up?
Usually it goes something like this:
Them: You wrote a book? Is it romance?
Me: No… it’s dark fantasy. Like, really dark.
Them: Not romance?
Me: Nope. It’s actually based on the Holodomor, which was Stalin’s starvation of Ukraine, up to ten million people died in the years of 1932-1933. It was brutal.
How strange is it that I was not aware of this at all, in fact I don’t think I’ve ever heard of the Holodomor before – I will definitely go and look into this and it makes me even more excited to pick up this book as I love works of fiction that are based around true events.
You’ve been a blogger for many years now and also edit and beta read books. Would you say that reviewing books on such a regular basis has helped you to have a more critical view of your own writing?
Very much so. Being a reviewer and editor has taught me a lot about stories, how they flow, how the plot should work, how to hook readers and use words in the most powerful ways. I think it’s so important to read a lot if you are a writer, but as a reviewer and editor, I wasn’t just reading. I really had to dig into the books, see what made them work and why. I’ve learned from every book I’ve read and edited. I think it’s made me a much better writer.
And, now that you’re on the opposite side in terms of receiving reviews for your book – what does that experience feel like?
Well, first of all, I’ve never really given much thought to how terrifying reviewers were until I was trying to get reviewers to read my book. I never really gave it much thought. As a reviewer, I kind of just shrugged and thought, “Why would anyone worry about what I think?” but as an author, dear lord I’m terrified. These are people I have reviewed alongside for years. Many of them are my friends. I’ve traded Christmas cards with some of them, and now they are going to read my book and JUDGE IT. It’s… really something else.
And I will say the same thing about editing. As an editor, I am very careful about how I say what I need to say to the authors I work with, but being edited has really given me the appreciation of waiting for those edits to come back, and it’s really helped me understand that CONSTRUCTIVE criticism is much better than just criticism, and working with my authors, establishing a relationship, seems to ease the mind of both parties.
‘You must break before you can become’ – this is an interesting idea that comes through in your book. How much of your own personal experiences have fed into this? And, was that difficult to write about?
Seraphina’s story is, in a lot of ways, autobiographical. She has my spine and leg injury. She’s limited by chronic pain and difficulty walking, like me. She has to deal with this. She has to come to terms with her body and how it now functions and it’s hard. I very much felt everything she deals with, and writing that was incredibly therapeutic, but also difficult. Before I had my spine injury, I was an athlete. Now I’m not allowed to walk faster than “slow” and I have two canes, a walker, and a wheelchair for my bad days. Going from able-bodied to disabled has been very difficult, physically and emotionally.
I wanted to put that in my book, though. I wanted very much to see myself in a book, and so I decided to write parts of myself into this one. I also wanted to show people a glimpse of the complex emotions that underscore chronic pain, disabilities, and the like.
“You must break before you can become” was a line I thought up when I was in the hospital doing cancer treatment stuff. I felt broken. I felt like nothing could ever get worse than this right now, and I was surrounded by other people who felt the same way. It was hard. It was brutal, but I remember sitting there thinking about how broken I felt, and then thinking about how much my life would change afterward, how sometimes people have to break so they can make room for whatever it is that they are meant to become next.
I’ve read in a couple of interviews that you’re a ‘pantser’ not a ‘plotter’. Why does this approach work so well for you, are there any pitfalls that you can highlight for other potential new writers?
I’ve tried so hard to plot and it just falls flat on its face. For some reason, plotting kind of kills the element of discovery I feel as I write and it just sucks the joy out of writing in general. (Please give me a head start before you throw things at me.) I generally go into a book with an idea, a starting point and an ending point, and thoughts of a few things I want to touch on as I go, and then I just dive in. I get to know the characters, I get to understand their motivations, and the journey from start to end is just a whole lot of fun. And I get these moments where I have to sit back and say, “Holy shit, I did NOT expect that” and it’s those moments that really make the entire journey of writing so worth it for me.
Sure, the editing is a bit more difficult than it would be if I plotted, but for me at least, it’s worth it.
What’s next in the series? Can you give us a few tidbits of information??
An Elegy for Hope is book two, and I’m currently writing it. The third and final book is called A Requiem for Fate, and I have most of that one mapped out in my head already.
An Elegy for Hope is going to be a lot of nation building. I do an absolute ton of research before I write books in this series, because so much is based on history, so I’ll drop some clues on you. I’ve been reading a lot of books about the siege of Leningrad. Operation Barbarossa, and the history of the Kremlin, dating back to the 1000’s, as well as “little Stalin’s” that popped up after World War II in various countries, most notably Bulgaria, Hungary, and Poland.
Sounds fascinating stuff indeed.
Apart from reading, writing, editing and reviewing books, and of course life in general and a young family – do you actually have any time for other hobbies?
Ha! Sometimes I feel like I don’t have time to breathe. Everything basically sits on the back burner while I’m writing and editing for clients. Reviewing has taken a huge hit. I just don’t have as much time to review books these days, and I really don’t like reading books in the same genre as the ones I’m writing and editing so I don’t cross streams. When I write and edit, I read a ton of nonfiction (I’m on a bit of a whodunnit – true crime—kick right now.).
I love to cook, and I meal plan each week so I usually get to tinker with recipes and ideas for dinners all week, which is great.
I don’t do as much photography anymore, but I still am an avid photographer. Photography has always been a bit of zen for me. It forces me to focus on the small details, to notice beauty where I don’t expect it. Ultimately, photography is what I do when I have health issues cropping up. It forces me to remember that the world is a big place, and it’s beautiful despite my drama.
I also have an absolutely gigantic garden, and in spring, summer, and autumn, my kids and I spend most of our time outside picking fruits and vegetables.
That sounds amazing – I do enjoy gardening and cooking and using your own fruit and veg sounds ideal.
Thanks to Sarah for visiting my blog. I’ve left more information below about the book and other places that you can visit Sarah.
On a side note, Sarah has had undergone surgery in the past couple of days, I hope all has gone well and the road to recovery is an easy one.
The world is dying.
The Sunset Lands are broken, torn apart by a war of ideology paid for with the lives of the peasants. Drought holds the east as famine ravages the farmlands. In the west, borders slam shut in the face of waves of refugees, dooming all of those trying to flee to slow starvation, or a future in forced labor camps. There is no salvation.
In the city of Lord’s Reach, Seraphina, a slave with unique talents, sets in motion a series of events that will change everything. In a fight for the soul of the nation, everyone is a player. But something ominous is calling people to Lord’s Reach and the very nature of magic itself is changing. Paths will converge, the battle for the Sunset Lands has shifted, and now humanity itself is at stake.
First, you must break before you can become.

Friday Face Off : ‘nomad is an island’

Here we are again with the Friday Face Off meme created by Books by Proxy . This is a great opportunity to feature some of your favourite book covers. The rules are fairly simple each week, following a predetermined theme (list below) choose a book, compare a couple of the different covers available for that particular book and choose your favourite. Future week’s themes are listed below – the list has been updated to help out those of you who like to plan ahead – if you have a cover in mind that you’re really wanting to share then feel free to leave a comment about a future suggested theme. I’ve also listed events that take place during the year, that I’m aware of, so you can link up your covers – if you’re aware of any events that you think I should include then give me a shout. This week’s theme:
‘nomad is an island’ – A cover featuring a desert landscape
The first book that jumped into my head this week was Dune. It has some great covers and definitely fits the theme but I know I’ve used it before so wanted to come up with something different. I’ve come up with a book instead that I read as a teenager. It was one of my dad’s books that had three stories in one and at the time I read all three and was totally fascinated – I’m not sure how I’d feel about them if I was to reread but the author was H. Rider Haggard and the three stories in the volume were King Soloman’s Mines, She and Allan Quatermain (which is the sequel to King Soloman’s Mines. So this week my book is Allan Quatermain and here are a small selection of the covers:
My favourites are the covers with the lion and the elephants:
My favourite this week is the lion – just look at that face:

Which one is your favourite?
Like last week I’ve added a Mr Linky here so that you can leave a link if you wish or please leave me a link in the comments so we can all visit and check out each others covers. Thanks
I’ve updated the list and included themes through to the end of 2019 – I’ve also included events that I’m aware of so that you can perhaps link your themes up where possible (if you know of an event you’d like to share that let me know in the comments). I also have a list prepared for 2020 and so will set up a separate page soon for forthcoming themes. As always, if you wish to submit an idea then leave me a comment.
Next week – A cover featuring a longboat
Future themes: (if you’re struggling with any of these themes then use a ‘freebie’ of one of your favourite covers)
2019
12th April – ‘Odin, Odin, send the wind to turn the tide – A cover featuring a longboat
19th April – ‘It was the best of times, it was the worst of times – A cover featuring a school
26th April “The sunrise was the colour of bad blood” – A cover featuring a sunrise/sunset
(May is the month of Wyrd and Wonder – details here, Twitter: @wyrdandwonder)
3rd May – “How sweet to be a cloud, floating in the blue” – A cover that is predominantly blue
10th May – “As full of spirit as the month of May” – A cover featuring a festival/party/celebration
17th May – “The dark fire will not avail you, flame of Udûn. Go back to the Shadow!” – A cover featuring a fantasy beast
24th May – “bibbity, bobbity, boo” – A cover that features ‘magical things’
31st May – “simples” – A favourite fantasy cover
7th June – “One swallow does not make a summer” – A cover that makes you think of Summer
14th June – “Coraline opened the box of chocolates. The dog looked at them longingly.” – A cover featuring something sweet
21st June – Summer Solstice – the longest day of the year – Pagan rituals/standing stones/blazing suns – a cover with your own interpretation
28th June – “And who decided which people wore the striped pyjamas” – A cover that is striped
5th July – “The question of whether or not we are alone in the universe… has been answered” – a cover featuring something/somebody historic
12th July – A wrap around cover
19th July – “You can’t choose between life and death when we’re dealing with what is in between.” – A cover that is grainy or looks like ‘white noise’
26th July – “Ludo ….. down” – A cover that is Upside Down
2nd August – “There are children here somewhere. I can smell them.” A cover featuring children
9th August – “I’m disinclined to acquiesce to your request.” – A cover featuring Pirates
16th August – “The haft of the arrow had been feathered with one of the eagles own plumes” – a cover featuring feathers
23rd August – A cover that is a movie tie in
30th August – “I wandered lonely as a cloud” – a cover that is predominantly yellow
6th September “Warm September brings the fruit” – a cover that is seasonal for Autumn/Fall
13th September – Friday the 13th – unlucky for some! A cover with ‘curse’ in the title
20th September – “Your hair is winter fire,January embers.” – A cover featuring hair
27th September – Freebie
4th October – “Feed me Seymour” – A cover that is 60s horror
11th October – ““And, though there should be a world of difference between the smile of a man and the bared fangs of a wolf, with Joss Merlyn they were one and the same.” – a cover featuring an Inn
18th October – “It’s your favorite scary movie, remember? He had on the white mask, he stalked the babysitters.” – A cover featuring a scream
25th October – for Halloween – pick any scary cover you like
(I’m hoping that November will once again bring to us SciFiMonth – Twitter @SciFiMonth)
1st November – A cover that is predominantly grey
8th November – “big badda boom” – a cover that features an explosion
15th November – “No thinking thing should be another thing’s property, to be turned on and off when it is convenient.” – a cover featuring a robot
22nd November – A cover that is Futuristic
29th November – “When a day that you happen to know is Wednesday starts off by sounding like Sunday, there is something seriously wrong somewhere.” – a cover that is 60s sci fi
6th December – Now is the winter of our discontent, Made glorious summer by this sun of York” – a cover that puts you in mind of winter
13th December – A cover that features a temple/or religious icon
20th December – Longest Night – a dark and foreboding cover
27th December – the festive season – a cover that is glittery or sparkling
(2020 – January is Vintage SciFi month so I’ll be including possible themes to take that on board.)
9 April 2019

Ruthless Magic (Conspiracy of Magic #1)



