Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up

Sunday Post

Books read this week:

This hasn’t been a bad week.  I’ve read two of my books and also posted three reviews, plus I’ve started some blog hopping which i’ll hopefully catch up with this week.  We are definitely still adjusting to our language lessons, we’re out now two nights in the week, plus travel time and this is definitely having an impact on everything because there’s also a constant stream of homework – I feel like a teenager!  I’m enjoying the challenge though although I would point out that I’m not a natural when it comes to picking up different languages, I really have to work hard at it.  This week I read You All Die Tonight by Simon Kernick and also Ink Ribbon Red by Alex Pavesi.  As planned last week I also started Fury of the Gods by John Gwynne.

Next Week’s Reads:

This week I’m hoping to continue with The Fury of the Gods.  I have three November books to pick up which are:

Reviews Posted:

  1. The Book of Witching by CJ Cooke
  2. Hear Him Calling by Carly Reagon
  3. The Bog Wife by Kay Chronister

Outstanding Reviews

The Book of Witching by CJ Cooke

My Five Word TL:DR Review: A Book that will Bewitch

I’m loving CJ Cooke’s work and the Book of Witching is no exception.  A captivating novel  told in two timelines with mystery, witching and history combined.  

As with the other books I’ve read by this author she manages to capture atmosphere aplenty.  Here we have two completely different timelines, one harking back to the late 1500s where a woman is taken into custody and tried for being a witch, the other set in the modern era where a woman has been informed that her daughter has been badly burned and is currently in hospital, one of her friends is dead and the other missing.  

This is a pacy read and utterly compelling.  I practically inhaled this in two sittings.  I loved the mystery elements to the modern day setting.  Clem’s daughter was travelling the remote islands of Scotland when the terrible tragedy occurred.  Initially there’s a sense of horror about the shocking events but when Erin wakes in hospital and seems completely detached, refusing to answer to her name and coming across as less than sympathetic to what has happened to her friends, well, unsurprisingly the police start to take a closer look at her.  Of course her mother Erin and her ex husband are determined to prove her innocence and travel to Orkney to try and uncover some of the mystery – in the process being a bit embroiled with an unusual group of people that initially come across as quite scary.

Meanwhile, flashing back to the events unfolding in the historical storyline, Alison Balfour has been taken into custody and is about to stand trial as a witch.  A trial that is little more than a farce with Alison and her family being tortured until she confesses – after which she will be burned at the stake.  This was a period of unrest, the local inhabitants are being pressed hard and are struggling to live, emotions are running high.  Alison comes from a line of healers, known as hedge witches, people approach her for cures and other types of remedies and yet times are changing and these women that so many have relied on previously will start to be shunned, people afraid to name them friend for fear of the backlash.

I thought both stories were equally intriguing.  I confess I’m a sucker for dual timelines where we jump back and forth and throw in the awful persecution of innocent women that took place during those heinous witch hunts and an equally puzzling mystery on the flip story and I was definitely hooked.

The writing is great, clearly, once again, Cooke has carried out her research and in fact Alison, although with a slightly altered name, is based on a real character who suffered this terrible fate.  

It does take a little while, in fact the link between the two stories doesn’t become apparent until quite late in the tale but I didn’t have any issues with that.

In conclusion a deeply atmospheric read with a perfect combination of history and mystery, both stories clearly demonstrating the love that both these mothers share for their child and the determination to remain true.  I’m very much looking forward to seeing what this author comes up with next.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

My rating 4 of 5 stars

 

Review: Hear Him Calling by Carly Reagon

My Five Word TL:DR Review: Certainly Delivers Plenty of Chills

I enjoyed Hear Him Calling.  I expected a scary ghost story and Reagon delivers this aplenty.  This is well written, dark, sinister and I would also mention potentially triggering in more ways than one for some readers.

This is a story told (mainly) over two timelines from three perspectives.  As we begin the story we meet a young married couple, Kyle and Lydia as they view their soon to be house in Wales.  Kyle has inherited a tower, set remotely upon a welsh mountain, isolated from the village and with only a local farm and a derelict cottage as neighbours.  Straight away something feels ominous.  Kyle barely knew his grandfather and so the inheritance has come as a shock but also gives the couple hope.  They’re tired of the hustle and bustle of London.  Lydia suffers from trauma following something that happened to her during her student years and Kyle thinks the beautiful welsh countryside will be an inspiration for her.  Lydia isn’t really sold on the house though, she thinks she sees a man up the mountain waving at her, she hears someone shouting the name Martha in her head and the house is frankly a hot mess.  Drab, not very well cared for – just everything feels very ‘meh’ and Lydia doesn’t really like the idea from the outset – but it’s too good a chance to miss and Kyle is set upon the move, a quick lick of paint will cheer the place up no doubt and he’s already making plans to make the tower self sufficient.

So, the couple move in. Things don’t really get any better in fact this feels like a couple that were on the verge of not being together for much longer who’ve decided that a move will surely renew their love.  It really doesn’t quite work out like that for them in fact the move serves only to push them further apart.  Running away from their troubles was never really going to work as they actually took their troubles with them. There’s a general listlessness from both of them when it comes to doing anything and even when they make improvements their work is constantly undone with strange stains that refuse to be cleaned and scratches appearing in the new kitchen units.  A young baby and a new puppy (strangely enough that they decide to call Martha) doesn’t help the pressure and there’s an ominous feeling of the two being sucked into despair.

The second time line takes us back to a woman called Martha.  Martha’s is a sad tale.  She lives on the mountainside with just her brother for company.  He seems to be suffering from trauma and when he loses his job their relationship changes dramatically. Suffocatingly controlling at first it turns into something horribly abusive and ends with tragedy.  Martha’s story is fascinating even though it’s full of darkness and despair and I loved the way she relates her story.

The reader gradually learns of the history of the cottage and Martha and her brother as both Kyle and Lydia are experiencing their own versions of subtle horror within the house.  Kyle seems more determined than ever to make it work, determined it’s a good move. Lydia is experiencing more and more episodes, lights on the mountainside, hearing noises, footsteps stamping through the house, etc.  The house is definitely having a very powerful and negative effect on them both.

Then we start to learn more about Kyle and Lydia’s past.  At first there were little flags with some of Kyle’s behaviour but these definitely increase.  And, in spite of his insistence to stay at the tower he has no hesitation accepting invitations back to London and leaving Lydia and the baby on their own. Eventually, I found myself totally disliking Kyle and that’s putting it mildly.

This brings us to the cottage on the mountain.  This place gave me the creeps.  Seriously.  It’s scary – that is all.

On top of this the local villagers and the neighbouring farmers are downright unfriendly, apart from the local shopkeeper who does strike up a friendship with Lydia.

Put all these elements together and there’s this dark, foreboding tale of tragedy from the past that feels like it’s now overtaking our MCs with their lives almost becoming the disaster that Marth and her brother’s was.

In conclusion I couldn’t put this down.  I felt like the ending was a little abrupt and I’m still replaying some of the scenes in my head.  I would also again repeat to be warned about the triggers with this one, this is a tale of abuse and misfortune that won’t be for everyone.  Scary enough to give me the goosebumps and bad dreams – my advice, read it in the daylight.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

My rating 4 of 5 stars

Review: The Bog Wife by Kay Chronister

My Five Word TL:DR Review : Not Sure What I Expected

I enjoyed The Bog Wife, it’s intensely atmospheric, very much a story of characters rather than a hard focus on  plot and it’s incredibly original.

This is the story of the Haddesley family who have lived on a bog for generations.  The family tends to the bog and in return the bog provides a wife for the eldest son to continue their line.  It’s a very unusual folklore tale that really hooked me.  As the story begins we witness four of the children as they look after their father and the bog.  It’s not a great life to be honest, they seem to live in terror of their father, who is plotting with his second son, the mansion is old and decaying and they have little money which they have to use wisely.  It seems like the folklore surrounding the family and the pact they have with the bog has been fractured.  When the father eventually passes (and I won’t give more away about that here) a new wife fails to appear.  One of them begins to look a little more into the family’s history and it soon becomes apparent that everything is not quite as they’ve been led to believe.

I loved the setting and the eerie atmosphere.  There’s this huge old mansion.  Clearly, the family once had wealth and status (they in fact still have something of a reputation and people certainly avoid them) but now the place has fallen into disrepair.  It comes across as one of the most unwelcoming places that you can imagine.  Cold, drafty, unkempt and full of secrets and skeletons just waiting to make themselves known.  If you love a gothic setting then this will undoubtedly satisfy your need, for me it called to mind We have Always Lived in the Castle but here there’s a wild, abandoned feel to the place on top of the strange dysfunctional family and the odd beliefs they hold.

I can’t say I was overly fond of any of the family – which is perhaps the author’s intent.  The father is incredibly unpleasant and I wasn’t sorry when he passed.  He kept the children (and I say children but these are all adults now), in a stilted half life.  They were half starved, roaming around in old threadbare family  castoffs and were often at each other’s throats (a kind of bickering hatred that the father seemed to foster in them).  It has the feel of a cult and for a while there I was deluded into thinking this was more of a period story – but in actual fact this is a modern tale as we discover with the return to the fold of one of the siblings.  It’s like all of them are completely uneducated and unknowledgeable about the ‘real’ world.  They’re all completely mired in the family history and simply live for the bog.

Then, there’s the revelation – which I don’t want to spoil by giving too much away.  I’m still pondering this, in one respect, I’d gone down a rabbit hole of my own making, I thought I understood what was going to happen but in fact I was only half on track, and to be honest, I’m still not entirely sure about the ending and the route the author took.

This is a very frustrating review to write because I’m trying to be oh so careful with what I say.  I think it’s best to keep this short and sweet.  What I can say without any doubts.  This is well written, it’s totally intriguing and had me hooked, it’s unpleasant in parts and the characters are not the sort you want to really hug but in spite of that the story kept me reading into the wee hours.  I had no trouble finishing this in an almost indecently quick snip.  I wouldn’t say I loved it and I’m not sure it’s the style of book that you would say you loved.  On the other hand I certainly didn’t dislike it, it’s compelling and keeps you guessing. I definitely want to read more by this author and I’m very curious to see what she comes up with next.  Would I recommend this – yes, I would.  The writing is evocative, the characters all stand out and I couldn’t put the book down.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publishers, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

My rating 3.5 of 5 stars

Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up

Sunday Post

Books read this week:

This has been another busy week.  We’re still coming to terms with our language lessons that are having quite a big impact on how much free time we have. That being said this hasn’t been a bad week for reading although I have quite a few reviews to catch up with now plus I need to answer some comments and check out what you’ve all been up to.  So, books.  This week I read The Witching by CJ Cooke which I really enjoyed.  I really like this author. I also read Run by Blake Couch – this is an unusual concept and I’m still thinking about it.  It was certainly gripping with no end of tension.  I’m also pleased to say that phase 1 of SPFBO is complete  and the ten finalists are now chosen. Check here for more information.

Next Week’s Reads:

I’ve already started You All Die Tonight by Simon Kernick which will  be followed by Ink Ribbon Red by Alex Pavesi.  If I can make my way through these I’m hoping to pick up one of my October reads and The Fury of the Gods by John Gwynne is really calling to me.  Probably not a good idea to make too firm plans and just go with the flow though.

Reviews Posted:

  1. By a Silver Thread by Rachel Aaron
  2. The Enchanter’s Counsel by Thalib Razi

Outstanding Reviews

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