Now is the winter of our content, made glorious summer by this array of books
28 November 2017
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: The Broke and the Bookish, Top Ten Tuesday

Every Tuesday over at The Broke and Bookish we all get to look at a particular topic for discussion and use various (or more to the point ten) examples to demonstrate that particular topic. This week’s topic is:
Top Ten Books On My Winter TBR
This is a nice easy one. My upcoming reads for December, January and February include the following books that I’m really looking forward to:
- Firestorm by Lucy Hounsom
- The Cruel Prince (The Folk of the Air) by Holly Black
- The Queen of All Crows by Rod Duncan
- The Wolves of Winter by Tyrell Johnson
- A Time of Dread by John Gwynne
- The Girl in The Tower by Katherine Arden
- Paris Adrift by E.J. Swift
- The Toy Makers by Robert Dinsdale
- Mister Tender’s Girl by Carter Wilson
- The Gone World by Tom Sweterlitsch
Weekly Wrap Up : 26/11/17
This week has again flown, I feel like time is racing away from me as quickly as I try to get things organised. We’ve been on a few walks – in fact as we’re trying to fit in more walks, and don’t laugh, we’ve downloaded Pokemon Go and we’re collecting critters as we mooch about. On top of that, we’ve moved onto series 3 of American Horror – liking this one already, it’s all about witches. And in terms of reading I’ve been making my way each night through The Emerald Circus by Jane Yolen – which, given that I don’t usually like short stories has gone very well. And Kill Creek – which was really good and gave me the goosebumps.
Anyway, hope you all had a good week.
Last week’s reads:
- Kill Creek by Scott Thomas
- The Emerald Circus by Jane Yolen
- The Saga of Dirt and Poncho by Clayton Baker, Michael Kuecker
Next week’s reads:
- War Witch by Layla Nash
- Jack Bloodfist: Fixer by James Jakins
- The Cruel Prince by Holly Black
Upcoming reviews:
- A Matter of Blood by Sarah Pinborough
- Starborn by Lucy Hounsom
- The City of Brass (The Daevabad Trilogy #1) by S.A. Chakraborty
- The Naturalist by Andrew Mayne
- Kill Creek by Scott Mayne
Let me know what you’re reading this week.
#SPFBO My sixth batch of books
25 November 2017
Filed under #SPFBO, Book Reviews
Tags: Mark Lawrence, Sixth batch of books, SPFBO '17
I’m on the final stretch of the first round of the SPFBO. Below is my sixth (and final) round of books listed below in the order I’m going to check them out – five books a month for six months. The aim is to choose one book out of each of the six batches and then from those 6 potentials choose one to submit for the final stage.
Without further ado here are my books this month (and I’ve already started these so my final thoughts should also follow fairly shortly):

A Gaze of Flint by Sandy Hyatt-James
Elizabeth Blake, a young woman with ‘The Sight’, given to her by people in a parallel universe, becomes entangled in a plot to kidnap a child.
She falls in love with an agent from the parallel universe, but unknown to her, he has fallen in love with a woman from his own land. As events unfold, Elizabeth finds herself and the child captured by a mentally deranged woman. Since the police and her family fail to find her, she has no choice but to use her wits and match her cruel adversary in cunning, in order to survive. Adding to this is her growing belief that the man with whom she placed her trust, has abandoned her.
A Gaze of Flint, has all the ingredients of a tense thriller, which also streams images of romance and a tint of the paranormal into its readers’ imaginations.

The Empire of the Dead by Phil Tucker
Acharsis has always loved long shots. But even with a perfect scheme and a handpicked squad of godsblooded grifters and fighters, breaking into the undead lord’s Akkodaisis’ ziggurat is suicidally impossible. Good thing Archarsis is a fallen demigod with more than one trick up his sleeve…
Unpredictable, fast paced, and packed with memorable characters, The Empire of the Dead is a gripping tale of revenge replete with demons, ancient magic and a high stakes heist.
Dark Moonlighting by Scott Haworth
Nick Whittier, having been alive for six centuries, has had plenty of time to master three professions. In a typical week he works as a police officer, lawyer and doctor and still finds time to murder someone and drink their blood. He used to feel guilty about the killings, but now he restricts himself to only eating the worst members of society. Few people in Starside, Illinois seem to care about the untimely deaths of spam e-mailers, pushy Jehovah Witnesses and politicians. However, the barriers between Nick’s three secret lives start to crumble when a mysterious man from his past arrives in town seeking revenge. Nick must move quickly to prevent the three women in his life, and the authorities who are hunting him, from discovering his terrible secret.
Dark Moonlighting is the first book in the humorous series. It explores four of the biggest clichés in popular culture, and it pokes fun at a number of popular television shows including Law & Order, Bones and House. It also takes a more realistic and amusing approach to the vampire cliché. For example, the average human has the equivalent of five Big Gulps worth of blood in their body. Nick takes twenty minutes to kill someone and, like the vampire bat, must immediately urinate afterwards.
Road to Shandara by Ken Lozito
When a mythical world threatens everything, an unlikely hero must join the battle…
College senior Aaron Jace is ready to start life in the real world. After the unexpected death of his grandfather, Aaron finds an unbelievable note that will change his world. The unknowing descendent of an ancient and powerful family, Aaron is thrust into a struggle that began long ago and will reach across worlds to pull him into the fight.
When he learns of the world of Safanar, it seems to be the stuff of legends: dragons, castles, and technologically-advanced cities. But it’s as much a dream as it is a nightmare. Danger lurks in the shadows, and a demon sentinel named Tarimus wants to steal Aaron’s power before he can learn his full potential.
With the help of an imprisoned Safanarion guardian, two mystical swords, and a puzzling family heirloom, Aaron must journey from Earth to find the fabled land of his ancestors. It may be a path that’s impossible to survive.
The Archbishop’s Amulet by Watson Davis
Caldane was once in training to be a shaman for his clan but now he’s a slave of the Nayen empire, trapped in a monastery, his magic being drained away by horrific human sacrifices. With the rest of his clan murdered by the giantess, General Silverhewer, and her army of orcs and humans, Caldane dreams of freedom and the return to the northern wastes of his childhood.
When a new batch of sacrifices are brought in, he seizes his chance for escape but during his recapture, he learns one of his clan still lives. His mother is a slave in Silverhewer’s fortress in Windhaven.
Nothing will stop him from saving her, not even if he has to release Hell and all its devils and demons.
“Always winter but never Christmas.”
24 November 2017
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Books by Proxy, Discworld #35, Friday Face off, Terry Pratchett, Wintersmith

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. This week’s theme:
‘I wonder if the snow loves the trees and fields, that it kisses them so gently’ – a cover featuring snow
This week I’ve chosen Wintersmith (Discworld #35) by Terry Pratchett. I loved the Tiffany Aching series of books and there are a lot of covers for this one:
I like quite a few of these covers, some of them scream Pratchett don’t they and there’s a few on here that I’ve not seen before. My favourite this week:

I love this cover – it has a sense of mischief and fun and the Tiffany Aching books are certainly a whole lot of fun.
Which is your favourite?
Next week – a cover featuring a fancy font
Future themes:
1st December 2017 – The pen is mightier than the sword – a cover featuring a fancy font
8th December 2017 – ‘Do not go gentle’ – a cover featuring the night…
15th December 2017 – Hubble bubble toil and trouble – a cover featuring a portion/perfume bottle
Weave a Circle Round by Kari Maaren
Weave a Circle round was a lot of fun, a slightly crazy coming of age style story involving a dysfunctional family, a couple of very unusual characters, an house where anything is possible and time travel. Picture, if you will, the Royal Tenenbaums meets The Book of Lost Things and then throw in portals, time travel and a bunch of oddness.
Freddy is definitely an anxious teenager. She spends the majority of her time trying to keep a low profile which isn’t always easy given she has a younger sister who thinks she’s a master detective and a deaf step brother who she doesn’t get along with who seems to hang out with a bunch of geeky kids – doubtless just to make her life even more difficult. For Freddy, attending school is like walking over the abyss, on a tightrope whilst carrying a wriggling elephant on your shoulders. Every day feels like the day she will finally come unstuck and plummet into the abyss with all the ensuing harsh spotlight, attention and bullying that are a natural result of losing your place in the stream of anonymity. Basically, Freddy wants nothing more than to remain unnoticed.
Enter the scene Cuerva Lachance and Josiah. They take up residence in the house next door and from the moment they arrive, crashing dramatically into a tree (that isn’t a driveway) they bring the whacky with them. The house becomes a conundrum, chairs and plants seem to multiply, rooms are not always where you thought they should be and the sisters, Freddy and Mel, become fascinated in the place and it’s occupants – in spite of being told in very strong terms by their step brother, Roland, to avoid the place like the plague. Roland seems to have developed some sort of deep dislike for the new neighbours, Mel thinks there is a mystery to be solved and Freddy, now with a new eccentric and rather disruptive friend in tow finds her worst nightmares about school finally coming true.
So, I mentioned this has a coming of age type feel to the story. Freddy is unhappy at home and lives her life in a constant state of fear when at school. Her parents divorced and her mum and step dad seem to be noticeable in their absence as they very rarely seem to put in an appearance. These two new characters show up in her life causing yet more chaos and unwanted attention until finally the unthinkable happens and Freddy finds herself tumbling through time with Josiah and experiencing a life changing journey.
I really enjoyed this book. I must say that it has a young feel to it somehow and I think it would make a very good read for a younger audience but at the same time I think it could equally make an enjoyable read for an older audience. It has an element of mystery to it in terms of the new neighbours, there’s a sense that things might not be quite as harmless as they appear, particularly when taking the ominous prologue into account and the antics and dialogue of the new neighbours was undeniably entertaining.
The characters were quite well drawn and easy to like. I’m not going to say I loved any of them in particular but they weren’t difficult to get along with. I think my favourite would definitely be Cuerva Lachance because I simply enjoyed the strangeness that she brings to the story. Neither Cuerva or Josiah are what they at first seem to be and part of the fun of this story is in the discovery of what’s actually going on.
In terms of criticisms. Well, I’m never a big fan of time travel to be honest. I thought it was really well done here but it wasn’t my favourite element of the story. And, the ending just became a feast of oddity. But, neither of these two minor quibbles were enough to stop me enjoying the book.
Overall, I thought this was a really fun and entertaining story. It’s probably not what I originally expected because for some strange reason I got it into my head that this would be one of those neighbour moving in next door type stories that becomes a little bit creepy and Adam’s family(ish) – and it really isn’t. But, I had fun with this and couldn’t stop reading so that’s always good in my humble opinion.
I received a copy through Netgalley courtesy of the publishers for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.
This review was originally published on The Speculative Herald.





