September : My Month in Review
And there was September, gone. Where did it go – I don’t know but it was certainly in a hurry wherever it went to. And the month of October is almost upon us. I love this time of the year. I’ve set myself a little self imposed challenge for the month of October which will commence tomorrow. Anyhow, September wasn’t too bad in terms of reading and blogging, still a little bit slower than I’d like but then I’ve had lots of people visiting and much socialising *shakes fist*, only kidding of course, obviously I just love socialising – I just want to read whilst being social – is that wrong? I read eight books, I probably didn’t catch up with any reviews that I’m behind with but on the plus side I didn’t fall further behind (difficult to catch up if everytime you write a review you read another book). I also checked out the second batch of my SPFBO books (six books, at least 30% of each to be read during the month). My lovely looking covers are here. Here’s my month in review:
Books read: this month = 8 (with reviews linked)
- The Silence of the Girls by Pat Barker
- Dark Water by Elizabeth Lowry
- I Always Find You by John Ajvide Lindqvist
- The Sisters of the Winter Wood by Rena Rossner
- Trail of Lightning by Rebecca Roanhorse – review to follow
- Record of a Spaceborn Few by Becky Chambers – review to follow
- Priest of Bones by Peter McLean – review to follow
- Dracul by Dacre Stoker – review to follow
What’ve you been reading??
Backlist books
None this month
Unfinished series completed:
None this month.
Books Bought:
- Charmcaster, Spellslinger #3 by Sebastien deCastell
- City of Kings by Rob J Hayes
Review Books
- Creatures, The Legacy of Frankenstein by Emma Newman; Tade Thompson; Paul Meloy; Kaaron Warren; Rose Biggin
- Soulbinder, #4 Spellslinger by Sebastien deCastell
- Priest of Bones by Peter McLean
- In the Night Wood by Dale Bailey
- Songwoman by Ilka Tampke
- Skyward by Brandon Sanderson
- Empress of All Seasons by Emiko Jean
- White Stag by Kara Barbieri
I have a couple of covers to compare:
Obviously, as I’ve not read this yet I’m not sure which best suits the story but the first is my favourite. that second cover is a bit creepy.
Finally, the SPFBO. The second month is coming to an end. I’ve read at least the first 30% of all six books and will be posting the outcome tomorrow.
September : My Month in Covers
Hi everyone, hope you’ve all had a lovely September. I’ve had a good month, maybe a bit slow with books and blogging but lots of time spent with friends and family, socialising. And, of course, the month of October is virtually upon us. Time to break out the creepy reads and mystery books, curl up on a chair and scare yourself silly. My last book this month was Dracul and I must admit that sitting reading last night I had the window open and the curtains were blowing into the room in a most creepy and unnatural fashion – I don’t advise it. Anyway, I’ve read eight books and also tackled my second batch of SPFBO books reading at least 30% of them all – an update will follow shortly. Below is a quick round up of the books I’ve read during September – all displayed in covers. My month in review will follow shortly. Hope you’ve read some good books this month.
And the covers for my six SPFBO books this month are:
Friday Face Off : Eyes wide shut

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. This week’s theme:
Eyes wide shut – a cover featuring eyes
I had fun this week with a few covers in mind. I eventually settled on The Host by Stephenie Meyer. There were a few covers available for this and whilst some of them are very similar there are slight variations that to me make a real difference. For example, check out the two ‘eye’ covers in the middle row. The middle cover looks very human apart from the ring of blue around the iris. The cover on the right, well, because of the angle, it could pan out to be something different altogether.
My covers:
My favourite this week:
I couldn’t decide and have gone for two for completely different reasons:
The butterfly cover is really striking and I like the layout. The ‘eye’ cover is the one I like best out of those type of covers because the angle is clever and it makes the face look almost alien.
Other FFO posts this week:
- The Bibliosanctum
- Brainfluff
- BooksBonesBuffy
- TheTattooedBookGeek
- Bookwraiths
- BooksandBeyondReviews
- Bookwormbookclub
- LiteraryFeline
- Jackiesforgetmenots
- PerfectlyTolerable
Leave me a link and I’ll add you to the list 😀
Next week – a cover that is ‘noir’
Future themes: (if you’re struggling with any of these themes then use a ‘freebie’ of one of your favourite covers)
5th October – “He sounded like a man who had slept well and didn’t owe too much money.” – A cover that is ‘noir’
12th October – “The impossible could not have happened, therefore the impossible must be possible in spite of appearances.” – A cover for a mystery novel
19th October -“If I cannot inspire love, I will cause fear!” – A horror cover
26th October – Trick or treat – A halloween inspired cover
2nd November – ‘Remember, remember the fifth of November,’ – A cover inspired by Bonfire Night
9th November – ‘All right! They’re spiders from Mars! You happy?’ – A cover feturing a critter of the eight legged variety
16th November – There is no terror in the bang, only in the anticipation of it.’ – A scary cover
23rd November – ‘The child is in love with a human. And not just any human. A prince!’ – A cover featuring a mermaid/man
30th November – “..the children of the night. What music they make!” – a cover with a vampire
7th December – ‘I am Aragorn son of Arathorn; and if by life or death I can save you, I will.’ – A cover featuring a hero
14th December -“Heavy is the head that wears the crown” – A cover featuring a crown
21st December – ‘ho, ho, ho’ – A seasonal cover
28th December – A freebie – choose one of your favourite titles and compare the covers
2019
4th January – A cover that is fresh – New beginnings for a New Year
11th January – ‘I know I have the body of a weak and feeble woman, but I have the heart and stomach of a king’ – A cover that depicts a novel set in the Tudor period
18th January – A cover featuring an Amulet – either in the cover or title
25th January – ‘Be kind whenever possible. It is always possible.’ – A cover featuring a monk/priest/person of the cloth
1st February – A comedy cover
8th February – ‘Hi little cub. Oh no, don’t be ssscared.’ – A cover with snakes
15th February – A heart – for Valentine’s day past
22nd February – “Woe, destruction, ruin, and decay; the worst is death and death will have his day.” – A cover with abandoned building/s
1st March – ‘who will buy this wonderful morning’ – A cover featuring a shop or market
8th March – ‘Two little fishes and a momma fishy too’ – A cover featuring a fish/fishes or other sea creatures
15th March – ‘Beware the moon, lads.’ – A cover with a shapeshifter
22nd March – ‘A horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse’ – A cover featuring a king
29th March – “I thought unicorns were more . . . Fluffy.” – A cover featuring a unicorn
5th April – ‘nomad is an island’ – A cover featuring a desert landscape
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
Dark Water by Elizabeth Lowry
Dark Water is a book I read a few weeks ago but struggled to write a review for immediately. Upon finishing this my first impression was that this is a book primarily about obsession and to be honest, having left this review whilst my thoughts composed, I think that initial impression still rings true.
I found this an engrossing and accomplished read. It’s the sort of book that I would have read years ago when I was on a journey through my dad’s bookcase. It includes shout outs to certain classics and is a book that I would recommend if you enjoy a healthy dose of food for thought served with your plot. I would point out that my tastes run more to the speculative fiction side these days but I do still enjoy a read such as Dark Waters, especially when it so successfully mimics old style gothic writing but, to be clear, there are no supernatural elements gracing these pages, no ghosts or demonic possessions in the asylum and no scary sea monsters in the sea’s depths.
The book has a classic feel both in terms of historic period and writing style. It definitely nails the gothic aspect not just in terms of the asylum that becomes the setting for a good portion of the story but also the chapters set out on the high seas. We have a central narrator, a well spoken and successful doctor who recounts his time aboard the USS Orbis with enough eloquence and mystery to tempt readers onwards at a fairly tight clip in spite of the maybe slightly wordy feel. Hiram Carver has taken a position as ship’s doctor aboard the Orbis. It’s not a particular time that he enjoyed. He never really found his sea legs and he was out of sync with the other sailors. It’s a brutal environment to be sure. Food and water is strictly rationed and maintaining control of a hardened crew is no small accomplishment. Consequently, Hiram was rather out of sorts. The harshness didn’t sit well with his own sensibilities and the only redeeming quality of those hard 9 months was his introduction to William Borden. I won’t go into the events aboard the Orbis but suffice to say things become heated and out of hand and the result seems to tie Hiram and Borden’s fates inextricably together.
Upon leaving the Orbis and after a suitable time for recovery (in the eyes of his father that is) Hiram takes a position at Boston’s Asylum for the Insane. Here he begins to flourish under the warmth of the senior doctor and finds himself becoming invaluable to both the staff and inmates. Things almost threaten to become settled for a while until Borden himself is admitted to the Asylum as an inmate and Hiram throws himself into curing his former shipmate.
Underlying this is Borden’s own story of survival when he led a small dinghy of officers across the Pacific after a mutiny aboard ship. This particular story underpins much of the story. Borden has become a hero, a legend almost and he seems to exude a mysterious quality that attracts people like moths to a flame. I won’t say that Borden’s story was a surprise particularly but I don’t think that’s really the point to be honest. For me this was more an examination of mental fragility and a recognition of the depths which people will go to in order to survive and then, having survived, whether they can continue to live with their own actions afterwards.
Like I said above Hiram becomes fixated with Borden and in fact I felt there was a repressed sexual undercurrent to their interactions and a denial of something that was forbidden. Borden has definitely succumbed to madness and yet his actions and words are reasonable. He almost has a soothing appeal to him. Hiram on the other hand comes across as an odd narrator. He tells the story well and is unabashedly truthful even when some of the events don’t particularly shine an advantageous light on him. Some of his actions are incredibly self serving or selfish, he undoubtedly changes the lives of some of those around him who he is in fact in a strong position to help favourably and frankly he’s just not always likable – and I feel this is deliberate on the part of the author. Don’t get me wrong, I kept putting his actions to one side, hoping that he would redeem himself and that things would resolve themselves happily. But, and this is the thing with obsession, he was no more capable of change than Borden was. That one was incarcerated in an asylum and one was the doctor could reasonably have been swapped, both were credible, both were haunted and both had a strange fixation on eating and starvation as a form of self punishment. The whole thing kind of put me in mind of Shelley’s Frankenstein in respect of monstrosities and monsters.
In a nutshell I found this a compelling read. It’s very dark, beautifully written and incredibly evocative. It’s not particularly fast paced or startling in its revelations. It has an old feel to it and can be a bit wordy but I thought it was very impressive, even if maybe not a book for everyone. I would certainly read more books by this author.
I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.
30 September 2018







