Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up

Sunday Post

I’m trying to get back into the habit of doing a round-up of the week just completed and also take a look at my plans for the forthcoming week.  I rather got out of the habit of doing so but I would like to reinstate this type of post as I feel it keeps me on track.  So, I’m linking up to The Sunday Post over at Kimberly’s  Caffeinated Reviewer.  Without further ado:

Books read this week:

I’ve had a good week.  Although, our young dog Noodle managed to find (or make) a break in our perimeter fence and break free for a morning.  Her cunning plan for a bit of fun was thwarted when she realised that she couldn’t get back in the same way she’d left so she eventually called on the neighbours who kept her entertained until we got home.  Naughty Noodles.  In reading I managed to complete two backlist books, the Secrets of Hartwood Hall by Katie Lumsden and Crucible of Chaos by Sebastien de Castell.  I’ve started the audio book of Gods of The Wyrdwood by RJ Barker – still early days but I’m being pulled into this strange world.  And, I completed The Warm Hands of Ghosts by Katherine Arden which I loved.  I’ve also started another review book which I think I’ll probably finish today with luck – The Classified Dossier – Sherlock Holmes and Dorian Gray by Christian Klavier.

Complete The Classified Dossier – Sherlock Holmes and Dorian Gray by Christian Klavier.  Then I’m hoping to read another of my review books, Oracle by Thomas Olde Heuvelt.  I won’t make further plans than that.

Reviews Posted:

Top Ten Tuesday : Covers with Things Found in Nature

TTT

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:

Covers with Things Found in Nature

Ahh, how can I resist the opportunity to display some covers.  Take a look at these lovely covers packed with elements of the natural world – links to reviews/details are provided below:

The Tainted Cup/Starling House/The Cloisters/The Ghost Woods/Hollow Kingdom/Emily Wilde’s/The Storm Beneath the World/The Ten Thousand Doors of January/Daisy Darker/The Red Monarch

Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up

Sunday Post

I’m trying to get back into the habit of doing a round-up of the week just completed and also take a look at my plans for the forthcoming week.  I rather got out of the habit of doing so but I would like to reinstate this type of post as I feel it keeps me on track.  So, I’m linking up to The Sunday Post over at Kimberly’s  Caffeinated Reviewer.  Without further ado:

Books read this week:

So, fortunately I’m over my cold, although I still feel a bit tired – or perhaps that’s an excuse just to sit and read.  My reading has again gone well this week.  I picked up and completed my sampler of Empire of the Damned by Jay Kristoff which I will review shortly.  I also read one of my backlist books which was a gothic story about a governess hired to work in a remote mansion where very few staff are employed and the local village seem to dislike and distrust the tenants.  The Secrets of Hartwood Hall by by Katie Lumsden.  I completed the audio book of Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros and finally I picked up a very curious book called The Storm Beneath the World – more about that title very soon.   I realise this probably looks like a lot of books but to be fair I was already reading two of these before the new week began.

Next Week’s Reads:

I’m thinking next week I might try and complete another backlist book that I have already started, Crucible of Chaos by Sebastien de Castell and also make a start on one of my March review books, The Warm Hands of Ghosts by Katherine Arden.

Reviews Posted:

Everyone Who Can Forgive Me is Dead by Jenny Hollander

My Five Word TL:DR Review : Liked not Loved This One

Everyone2

To be fair to this book it is a good read, it captured my attention, the pacing was good and I enjoyed the writing.  But, having just read another couple of dark academia style novels very recently I think my timing could have been better – which is absolutely on me of course, and, this story very much relies on a trope that I’ve become very tired of – memory loss.

Charlie Colbert has worked hard to achieve success.  She is the editor-in-chief of a glossy magazine and is also engaged to the darling of the publishing world.  On the face of it she leads an almost charmed life.  Rich, powerful, beautiful.  But Charlie has a bloody past.  Nine years ago, whilst a student at an elite journalism school a brutal and shocking event that shook the country and became a media sensation took place.  Scarlet Christmas, as it became known, captured the public’s attention, probably more so because the true facts remain hidden, even to this date.  In fact, the only witness to that terrible event was Charlie  but to this day she has not been able to relive the experience and is still in fact undertaking therapy to help her cope.

The story is told in dual timelines.  We flip back and forth between the ‘then’ and ‘now’ and a picture gradually unfolds of friendship, excess, rivalry and obsession. That being said though, the author keeps a tight lid on events, she’s very careful in the way the story unfolds successfully keeping quite a few revelations firmly under wraps.

I thought the author did a very good job in ramping up the tension.  She fashioned Charlie into this incredible success story but then slowly but surely started to dismantle the walls that she has put up.  Unfortunately, the public’s desire to know more about Scarlet Christmas has never truly waned, the fires were stoked when a former pupil released a book about the killings and more fuel is being added to the fire when another former friend decides to adapt the film onto the big screen.  Everything Charlie has worked for sits on the precipice of disaster.

Okay, to cut to the chase with this one, I enjoyed it.  But, for me, the ending just didn’t make sense – I can’t really say too much because obviously I don’t want to give away spoilers but clearly the one thing that the author toys with a little (or a lot) is that you never know what happened that night – you don’t know because Charlie doesn’t know, but at the back of your mind is the seed of doubt ‘does Charlie know more than she’s saying and if she does – then why is she so afraid?’  Her mounting panic about the release of the film seems to point in the direction that she’s truly scared about what will eventually be revealed.

I will just hold up my hands and say that I’m a little bit tired of the ‘memory loss’ trope.  There it is and there’s no denying it.  However, I think the author did a very good job of maintaining tension and teasing you with little tidbits here and there.  And, to be fair, I don’t think the whole memory loss was really a big issue for me as I was very intrigued regardless.  I felt Charlie’s relationship was a little surplus to requirements.  Like it was thrown in just to add to the fear factor – one more thing that she was going to lose.  It didn’t come across as a real relationship at all to me, more like a distraction.

My main niggle was the ending.  It’s actually a good ending in that the author comes up with twists, and even though we’re in Charlie’s head, and can feel her ever increasing stress, she doesn’t spoil the big reveal.  And, the reveal, well I didn’t second guess it, which I applaud, but, on the back of that, it made me go back and question other events that had led up to this point.  The animosity and secrecy of Charlie’s former friend who is now making the film and the reasons why she’s making it.  This jarred for me.

All that being said, I did enjoy this one, my little niggles didn’t spoil that so much as just left me a little irritated.  I just wanted to ask questions but the chance was lost and so I came away with certain things unanswered.

In spite of my little issues, I would recommend this.  It’s an impressive debut and I will definitely look out for more by this author.

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

Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up

Sunday Post

I’m trying to get back into the habit of doing a round-up of the week just completed and also take a look at my plans for the forthcoming week.  I rather got out of the habit of doing so but I would like to reinstate this type of post as I feel it keeps me on track.  So, I’m linking up to The Sunday Post over at Kimberly’s  Caffeinated Reviewer.  Without further ado:

Books read this week:

I’ve been playing catch up this week which I think is going quite well in spite of having a bad cold.  In terms of reviews I’ve managed to squeeze in quite a few – well, in fairness I scheduled one of my regular posts on the wrong day by accident so I made use of that and posted an extra review and I also posted a double review – two mini reviews in fact.   My reading has gone very well this week.  I read and absolutely loved The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett.  My review will be posted very soon.  I’ve also read and already reviewed An Education In Malice by ST Gibson – it didn’t quite work for me unfortunately but I confess it’s a beautifully written story and incredibly atmospheric. I’ve also read two of my SPFBO finalists – so I’m very much on track in that regard – only four more finalists left to read now.  I need to start thinking about a posting schedule soon.  I’ve also started listening to an audio book – Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros.  So, that’s a lot of reading – but, this was probably assisted by the fact I wasn’t feeling well so not socialising as much or gardening, etc, – more time sitting around under a den of blankets with a hot drink and my kindle.

Next Week’s Reads:

Hopefully complete Fourth Wing.  I’ve also made a start on Empire of the Damned by Jay Kristoff.  This is a sample and not the full book but given what a chunkster this book is it will be good to get a head start on things.  Once I complete EotD my review books for February are all complete so I might then try one of my backlist books if time allows.

Reviews Posted:

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