Top Ten Tuesday: Books Set in Snowy Places
9 December 2025
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: A Haunting in the Arctic, Books Set in Snowy Places, Shiver, That Artsy Reader Girl, The Bear and the Nightingale, The Gathering, The Glass Hotel, The Hunting Party, The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe, The Shining, The Snow Child, The Wolf in the Whale, Top Ten Tuesday

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 prompt is:
Books Set in Snowy Places
1. The Shining by Stephen King
2. The Lion The Witch and the Wardrobe by CS Lewis
3. The Glass Hotel by Emily St John Mandel
4. The Hunting Party by Lucy Foley
5. The Bear and the Nightingale (The Winternight Trilogy) by Katherine Arden
6. The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey
7. The Gathering by CJ Tudor
8. A Haunting in the Arctic by CJ Cooke
9. Shiver by Allie Reynolds
10. The Wolf in the Whale by Jordanna Max Brodsky
I have to say there are some excellent books above and I had quite a few more that I could have shared. I highly recommend all of these.
What about you? Do you have any other books that you would add to this list?
The Warm Hands of Ghosts by Katherine Arden
4 March 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Book Reviews, fiction, Katherine Arden, The Bear and the Nightingale, The Warm Hands of Ghosts, The Winternight Trilogy
My Five Word TL:DR Review : This book is absolutely incredible
TWHoGs is one of my most anticipated reads for 2024. I loved The Winternight Trilogy and never miss an opportunity to wax lyrical about it so you may be able to understand how keen I was to see what the author would come up with next. I can’t deny that when I saw the description for TWHoGs I had slightly mixed feelings. It just feels so very different, and I also don’t tend to read a great deal of stories from WW1 and WW2 – perhaps I should after this experience – and so I did feel a little bit worried about how I’d get on – never fear, this story is so good, I’m absolutely 100% certain that I can’t do it justice with this review but I’ll give it a try.
In a nutshell, this is a truly stunning book. It’s a little piece of perfection. Okay, it’s also dark and disturbingly atmospheric. It’s full of pain and heartbreak but at the same time there are snippets of warmth and light, little anecdotes pepper the narrative and on top of that it’s incredibly well plotted dipping back and forth and sometimes taking a new look at an already visited scene but from a new angle. I could envisage every chapter, I quite literally had my own little movie running inside my head – it is that good.
The story is told in two timelines that eventually converge. Freddie Iven, November 1917, trapped under an upturned pillbox discovers he’s not alone. He is accompanied by a German soldier, Hans Winter. Through fear and desperation these two will form a strong bond, determined to help each other survive. Their time in the dark and suffocating space of the pillbox was terrifyingly claustrophobic.
In January 1918 Laura Iven, Freddie’s sister receives a box with his belongings, including his tags. Laura has recently lost both parents in a devastating explosion and has returned home, discharged from her duties as field nurse after being quite badly wounded. Within such a short time Laura seems to have lost everything but then a number of strange occurences start to worry at her mind, causing her to want to look a little harder into Freddie’s death and prompting her to return to work on the front line.
To be honest, I don’t really want to give away too much about the plot. We jump back and forth between the two siblings and a picture gradually forms of what has happened. Now on top of that, there’s a speculative side to the story which predominantly revolves around ghosts and deals with the devil (that’s my take – the actual story involves a character known as the Violinist). Now, both these things are so well incorporated that they feel more like a natural progression of the war. Surrounded by death it’s easy to see why the men fighting on the front saw the ghosts of those they’d known, and a stranger, offering a warm hotel and a comforting glass of wine – well, of course, you’d want to linger by that fire trying to forget all the atrocities you’ve seen. So, whilst there are supernatural elements to this story their inclusion seems almost part and parcel of the dreadful circumstances of the war. Probably not explaining myself very well, I guess what I’m trying to say is the inclusion of these speculative elements felt natural as part of this particular story.
What did I love about this.
The writing. Arden is a gifted storyteller, a wordsmith who can throw you into a scene with deceptive ease. Clearly she has done her homework here and it shows. She brings the battlefield to the page with such clarity that you can feel the fear, taste the noxious atmosphere and hear the cacophony of gunfire, shells and dying men. She doesn’t shy from the brutal truth and in some ways that will make this difficult for some readers but I would say this is one of the most gripping and realistic books involving warfare that I’ve ever read.
The balance. The pacing is good, there is a little bit of set up here but it’s good so don’t be in too desperate a rush to cut to the chase. Everything in this story is of note. In fact it’s relatively short considering the story it delivers. But, what I ultimately mean about the balance is not just in terms of the pacing. There are moments of love, laughter and friendship that give a welcome respite from the bleak brutality of war surrounding the characters.
The characters. I really liked Laura – and I really liked Freddie and Winters. I enjoyed the jump from one story to the other and this is an achievement because sometimes with a dual timeline you find yourself resenting the switch when you don’t enjoy one of the threads. Laura is determined to find out the truth about her younger brother, she doesn’t dare hope but at the same time she is desperately hopeful. Freddie is in absolute despair, without the friendship of the slightly older Hans whose steady reliability and authority are a comforting presence, he would never have got out of the pillbox. Don’t get me wrong, there are other wonderful characters here but I’m not going to highlight them all.
The setting. Well, after a short spell in Laura’s home we eventually find ourselves on the battle front. Laura is a field nurse in the Forbidden Zone and Freddie, out in the war zone, struggling to survive and then finding himself a guest of the Violinist, his personality slowly ebbing as he seeks oblivion in the bottom of a wine bottle. The Violinist could be a simple hotelier, at night, you might be guided by the brief appearance of a light to seek out it’s door and the warmth within, in the grim light of day the place is dilapidated and shabby and seems to be a warren of never ending locked doors.
The plot has more to it than I originally imagined. I won’t give anything away here but one of Laura’s companions, also suffering a terrible loss is gradually spiralling out of control and this feeds really well into the two timelines and the way events play out.
Overall, I can’t say enough good things about this book. It’s the sort of book that makes me love to read. I devoured it and then was disappointed with myself for not savouring it more. I don’t really have anything negative to say, the ending is a mixture of bittersweet and sweet. You’ll have to read it yourself to find out why.
Highly recommended.
I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.
My rating 5 of 5 stars
“It was the possibility of darkness that made the day seem so bright.”
8 December 2017
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Books by Proxy, Friday Face off, Katherine Arden, The Bear and the Nightingale

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:
Do not go gentle’ – a cover featuring the night…
This week I’ve chosen : The Bear and the Nightingale (The Winternight Trilogy #1) by Katherine Arden. I loved this book and am about to start reading The Girl in the Tower – which I’m so excited about. So, here are the covers:
I actually like all these covers – the imagery is so beautiful but my favourite without any doubt is:

I just love this cover – I would pick this book up without doubt just because of how beautiful it looks. Fortunately, the book is brilliant and lives up to the promise of the jacket. Can’t judge a book by it’s cover eh!
Which is your favourite?
Next week – a cover a potion/perfume bottle
Future themes:
15th December 2017 – Hubble bubble toil and trouble – a cover featuring a potion/perfume bottle
22nd December – ‘Oh, we loves games! Doesn’t we, precious?’ – a cover featuring a Puzzle or Game
29th December – If music be the food of love, play on – a cover featuring a Musical Instrument
5th January – ‘The seaweed is always greener, in somebody else’s lake.’ – Under the Sea
12th January – ‘More than one meaning have I’ – a cover featuring a Knot/knots
19th January – You know your A, B, Cs – a cover made up only of letters/words
26th January – “The grass is always greener on the other side of personal extinction” – a cover featuring grass
2nd February – Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds – a Psychedelic cover
9th February – ‘My what big teeth you have’ – a cover featuring a cloaked figure
16th February – ‘Groovy baby’ – a cover that is: Retro
23rd February – “There are too many steps in this castle, and it seems to me they add a few every night, just to vex me” – a cover featuring a staircase
2nd March – ‘The only true wisdom is to know that you know nothing’ – a cover featuring something from Greek mythology
9th March – ‘…but Icarus flew too close’ – a cover featuring the Sun
16th March – ‘I got no strings to hold me down’ – a cover featuring a doll or puppet
23rd March – “When she was a child, the witch locked her away in a tower that had neither doors nor stairs.” – a cover featuring a Tower
30th March – ‘A little soil to make it grow’ – a cover featuring seeds/spores
6th April – “After a good dinner one can forgive anybody, even one’s own relations.” – a cover featuring a family
13th April – ‘lawns and rocks and heather and different sorts of trees, lay spread out below them, the river winding through it’ – a cover featuring a panorama
20th April – Where there’s fire there’s… – a cover featuring smoke
27th April – ‘Those darling byegone times… with their delicious fortresses, and their dear old dungeons, and their delightful places of torture’ – a cover that is positively mediaeval
4th May- ‘A Hand without a hand? A bad jape, sister.’ – a cover featuring a hand/hands
11th May – ‘Dinosaurs eat man. Woman inherits the earth’ – a cover featuring a dinosaur/s
18th May – ‘Let’s talk of graves, of worms, and epitaphs;’ – a cover featuring a gravestone
25th May – Trip trap, trip trap, trip trap – a cover featuring footsteps
1st June – clinging and invasive – a cover featuring creeping vines
8th June – Raining Cats and Dogs – a cover featuring a stormy sky
The Bear and the Nightingale by Katherine Arden
5 January 2017
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Katherine Arden, The Bear and the Nightingale
The Bear and the Nightingale is one of those gorgeous nuggets of a book that you simply devour. As soon as I read the synopsis, I wanted this book, in fact, lets be honest, as soon as I saw the cover – I wanted this book – which might sound fickle, because you shouldn’t judge a book by it’s cover after all. However, fickle or not, the inside of this book is more than a match for the outer packaging.
This is definitely my sort of book. The writing is really quite beautiful, the author almost hypnotises you, she lulls you into a false sense of security with a beginning that draws you slowly in with the promise of folklore, myth, icy forests and fairytales retold and then before you know it the temperature has dropped further, menace is in the air and threatening shadows lurk in the darkest corners.
As we begin the story we make the acquaintance of the Vladimirovich family. Pyotr the father, a hard but fair man for the times in which he lives, he is thought well of by the people in the village. He loves his wife and is devastated when he loses her in childbirth. For seven years he resists taking a new bride, and only relents to try and bring a woman into his home to help with his youngest daughter, Vasilisa, who is becoming unruly. Unfortunately, whilst his new wife, Anna, seems like a good match things are not quite as they seem. Anna sees demons everywhere and literally lives in fear, upon her insistence the village is blessed with a new holy man in the form of Konstantin. Konstantin has dreams of success and power, he resents being sent out to the middle of nowhere and believes that in order to succeed he must make the people from the village recant their ways and worship only God. And there starts the problems. Poor harvests, colder, longer winters and eventually death ensue. The village people begin to feel scared, their homes are impossible to keep warm, they never have enough food and portents of evil seem to linger in the forest.
Vasilisa is a great character. I really liked her, she’s spirited and wild. She loves the forest. She loves being told fairytales by her nurse Dunya. Like Anna – she also sees things but rather than cowering she addresses them. She feels like she knows these spirits and guardians and feels no fear of them. In fact quite the reverse, she understands the role they play in the everyday balance of the village and more to the point she fears the repercussions on everyone if these spirits start to fade. I couldn’t help but shake my fist in despair on Vasilisa’s behalf. Okay, you have to remember these were superstitious times but ohhhh, the frustration! Vasilisa seems to be taken the wrong way at every turn and even when she does a good deed it’s taken the wrong way. Mutterings of ‘witch’ are starting to break out and the village seem to be on the verge of hysteria just poised on the edge of pointing the finger at the most appropriate scapegoat.
So, we have a wild and wilful daughter, a harsh stepmother, a hysterical village, a whole bunch of spirits and guardians, and, the star of the piece – Morozko. Sorry, I thought I’d save the best to last. Basically, this character is Frost. Cold, curious, capricious and more. For many moons he has been interested in Vasilisa and on more than one occasion the two of them have met. Not a character to be dallied with but definitely one that I would have liked to see more of. In fact, that’s probably one of my only criticisms. I would have liked more of the fairytale/folklore elements of the book and I certainly would have liked more of Frost. I actually like the pacing of the book, I admit that in terms of plot, well, it’s not very substantial, but going into this thinking of it as a fairy tale retelling I wasn’t expecting some form of great epic adventure. What I expected was writing that evokes feelings and creates atmosphere and in that respect Arden more than succeeds – you could virtually feel the cold and the hunger that the family suffered. She also manages to tempt us with maybe things of the future yet to come and I really appreciate the sense of anticipation that she has created. There is only the barest hint of a romance, it skirts tentatively around the edges of the story tempting us but doesn’t really ever manifest in more than the most ethereal form. It’s just so deliciously tempting and elusive.
On the whole though, I loved this and with a couple more books in the pipeline you can colour me happy!
I received a copy of this from the publisher through Netgalley for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.
Waiting on Wednesday: The Bear and the Nightingale by Katherine Arden
3 August 2016
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Breaking the Spine, Katherine Arden, The Bear and the Nightingale, Waiting on Wednesday
“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme hosted by Breaking the Spine. Every Wednesday we get to highlight a book that we’re really looking forward to. My book this week is : The Bear and the Nightingale by Katherine Arden. This book sounds absolutely wonderful – and I want it. Bit of a wait for this one as it’s due out Jan 2017 – but I think it’s worth it!
A young woman’s family is threatened by forces both real and fantastical in this debut novel inspired by Russian fairy tales.
In a village at the edge of the wilderness of northern Russia, where the winds blow cold and the snow falls many months of the year, a stranger with piercing blue eyes presents a new father with a gift – a precious jewel on a delicate chain, intended for his young daughter. Uncertain of its meaning, Pytor hides the gift away and Vasya grows up a wild, willful girl, to the chagrin of her family. But when mysterious forces threaten the happiness of their village, Vasya discovers that, armed only with the necklace, she may be the only one who can keep the darkness at bay.
Due January 2017














