31 Dec 2016

A 2016 NEW YEAR EVE'S GREETING.

I'm trying so hard to smile when thinking of 2016, to remain optimistic that 2017 will prove to be a better year, to believe that 'the light at the end of the tunnel isn't simply the next train about to hit us' ... but it isn't easy.

An awful year in so many respects. 


I truly hope that this coming year ..
The kindness, the warmth, the friendship you have shown to others is returned to you in abundance.
That love, laughter, peace,
All the things actually worth possessing
Are yours this year,
With every blessing.


30 Dec 2016

(HOUSEWIFE #5): HOUSEWIFE IN TROUBLE.

Welcome to Pen and Paper and my last book of 2016. 

HOUSEWIFE IN TROUBLE by ALISON PENTON HARPER.

BACK COVER BLURB (Contains what might be considered spoilers. To read full synopsis please scroll over darkened text TT): 

If I start cooking every day, then Rick will soon start expecting it... and I'll have no one to blame but myself. I'm not bloody well going there again. The trick is to retain the all-important element of surprise. Keep the catering unpredictable, like the train services. Maybe I'll cook. Maybe I won't. It all depends on whether or not there are leaves on the line, or the wrong kind of snow.

Helen has done the one thing she swore she never would: remarry. A few weeks after the drive-thru’ ceremony, the reality of it hits her. She will henceforth wake up every morning next to snoring rhinoceros Rick, a man with all the subtleties of a brick coming through your living room window. Under the questionable tutelage of crazy Leoni, Helen vows to reinvent herself as a guilt-free, modern Superwife, and determines to master the innocent art of womanly deception.

Meanwhile, big sister Julia suffers a major crash-and-burn after the miraculous arrival of her new baby. Desperate to help her navigate a severe case of post-natal depression, Helen suddenly finds herself knee-deep in subterfuge and that, possibly, is what distracts her when Helga, the Russian cleaning lady, attacks Rick with a chair . . .

An Elvis wedding in Vegas. A panic-stricken newlywed wife. A severely concussed husband who cannot keep a secret. What could possibly go wrong? Bags open. Cats everywhere. As Elvis said, ‘If you’re looking for trouble, you’ve come to the right place' . . .

FIRST SENTENCE {CHAPTER ONE: THE BIG M}: It's not easy being married.

MEMORABLE MOMENT {PAGE 87}: 'Just finish that bottle and stop complaining,' Leoni bellowed. 'We're not taking you shopping with Axminster legs, and the last time I saw a moustache like that it was attached to a walrus.'

SOURCE: On my TBR mountain for that long I have forgotten.

MY THOUGHTS: Overall an 'OK' light-hearted chick-lit. 

Other than the fact that I had no prior knowledge of the characters, I cannot say my not having read any of the previous books impeded on my reading of this, the fifth novel in the series, which began a whole new chapter in the protagonist's life, that of a newly-wed. However ...

Humorous (though it never quite had me laughing out loud) in places but grossly stereotypical. Still, they say stereotypes exist for a reason and I think many readers will see something of themselves (or someone they know) ... even if it is just the 'snoring rhinoceros' of a partner ... in Helen, her sister, new mum, Julia and/or best friend, Leoni.

To sum it up in four words .... 'It had its moments'. I'm just not certain I'll be seeking out any of the other four books.


28 Dec 2016

SONGS OF THE HUMPBACK WHALE.

SONGS OF THE HUMPBACK WHALE by JODI PICOULT.

BACK COVER BLURB: (Contains what might be considered spoilers, scroll over darkened text to read. TT): 

The first time Jane Jones tried to leave her husband, her daughter almost got killed. This time, she's going to do it right.

Jane escaped a childhood of abuse into the refuge of marriage, only to find history repeating itself. And when her husband's neglect extends to their daughter too, she know's it must stop.

Taking Rebecca with her, Jane runs away, seeking the only place of safety she knows. But however far she runs, she cannot escape the question always on her mind: how can she save her daughter, when she couldn't save herself?


FIRST SENTENCE {PROLOGUE: REBECCA}: November 1990

In the upper right-hand corner of the photo is a miniature airplane that looks as if it is flying right into my forehead.

MEMORABLE MOMENT {PAGE 249}: I gazed into the mirror, expecting to find outlined the very parts that I could say I hated - but I was standing tall, thin arms at my sides. I  knew from this alien rhythm in my heart that I had become a different person. I did not understand how, under the circumstances, I could possibly look the same.

SOURCE: A charity shop buy.

MY THOUGHTS: Presumably a case of a writer who has yet to 'find her feet' as an author of books. Having read and largely enjoyed most of her other books (though oddly enough not so much her recent ones), I was sorely disappointed by Songs Of The Humpback Whale.

A total mish-mash of a read.

Not told from one point of view, nor two, nor three, nor four but .... five. All written in the first person, some of the events recounted not just by one individual but several.

As if this didn't make for confusing reading ...

The fact that the chapters were not written in chronological order nor consistently dated made the time-line extremely difficult to follow. That one of the characters told her side of the story in, wait for it, reverse chronological, even more challenging.

Sometimes written in letter form (not a favourite format of mine to begin with), the italics they were printed in, small and faint, also made for difficult reading. 

Then there were intermittent tracts given over to the biology (typically the song) of whales - something that was to be re-hashed using elephants instead of whales in a later book - which added nothing to the flow of the narrative. 

As for the characters? Talk about dysfunctional!!!!

There was spousal violence, child-hood sexual abuse, a brother in love with his sister, an extra marital affair, an under-age sexual relationship. In other words, bar one or two, just about every cliche that those familiar with Jodi Picoult's books have come to expect.


27 Dec 2016

ORPHAN TRAIN.

ORPHAN TRAIN by CHRISTINA BAKER KLINE.

AMAZON.CO.UK BLURB: Rich in detail and epic in scope, Orphan Train by Christina Baker Kline is a 
powerful novel of upheaval and resilience, of unexpected friendship, and of the secrets we carry that keep us from finding out who we are. 

Penobscot Indian Molly Ayer is close to "aging out" out of the foster care system. A community service position helping an elderly woman clean out her 

home is the only thing keeping Molly out of juvie and worse...

As she helps Vivian sort through her possessions and memories, Molly learns that she and Vivian aren't as different as they seem to be. A young Irish immigrant orphaned in New York City, Vivian was put on a train to the Midwest with hundreds of other children whose destinies would be determined by luck and chance.

Molly discovers that she has the power to help Vivian find answers to mysteries that have haunted her for her entire life - answers that will ultimately free them both.

FIRST SENTENCE {PROLOGUE}: I believe in ghosts.

MEMORABLE MOMENT {PAGE 64}: "The child you select is yours for free," he adds, "on a ninety day trial. At which point, if you so choose, you may send him back."

SOURCE: A Reader's Group read.

MY THOUGHTS: Though there were some gritty elements to Orphan Train, on the whole I found the writing to be more in tune with a book written for the Young Adult market. Not that I'm adverse to reading books aimed at this market, I was just expecting a more gritty, a more 'adult' read.

Verging at times on the overly sentimental (dare I say a bit cheesy?), largely predictable, the ending rushed. 

Two orphans, two time lines. 

I much preferred one aspect of the story to that of the other. Though tempted as I was to skip through Molly's story, I'm glad I didn't as hers and Niamh's story did eventually merge. That said I can't help but think the book might have benefited from either the author omitting Molly's story altogether, expanding on Niamh's/Vivian's OR, maintaining both stories, lengthen the book from its rather meagre 273 or so pages.

Despite these misgivings, essentially a good read. I'm just not sure the finer details (to say nothing of the characters) will stay with me for very long which is a shame given the theme of the book.


 

24 Dec 2016

SEASONS GREETINGS.


Cherishing those who are with us,
Remembering those who are not. 
Thinking of all those whose bodies ache, 
those who hearts are grieving.



 ... and Mr T.

23 Dec 2016

EVERY BREATH YOU TAKE: HOW TO BREATHE YOUR WAY TO A MINDFUL LIFE & THE GNOSTIC GOSPELS.

Two books, both GoodReads wins, both published by Watkins ...


INNER FRONT COVER BLURB: Being mindful of your breath simply means observing and opening your awareness to your breathing without controlling or judging it in any way: letting it be. This inspiring book consists of 16 mindful breathing exercises and is based on the words of Buddha, called the Anapanasati Sutta, in which he brought the teachings of mindfulness to the world.

FIRST SENTENCE {PROLOGUE}: We are all born with the perfect tool of mindfulness.

MEMORABLE MOMENT {PAGE 57}: Becoming mindful of our breath enables us to open our awareness to the whole of our body, accepting it, healing it. 

MY THOUGHTS: With its words of wisdom and 16 exercises all based around different aspects of breathing, whilst this has Buddhist teaching at it core I'd suggest it as being suitable for those of 'faith' as well as those who aren't. 

Easy and clear to understand guidance, ideal for those wishing a momentarily respite from the modern 'rat race'. Every Breath You Take is a handy pocket size read that is perfect for dipping into as and when.


I came to this book with a mind that was at once both cynical and yet open in the hope of mastering my breathing whilst calming my mind. Still early days, I can't claim to have conquered all of the techniques no matter how clearly they are written, but, unlike other so called 'self help' books that I've given up on, I have hopes this one may prove beneficial.


BACK COVER BLURB: The Gnostic Gospels , discovered at Nag Hammadi, are a collection of ancient texts dating from the 2nd to the 4th century AD. Of the 54 texts discovered, 14 have been chosen for this collection for their relevance today. The selected gospels reveal sayings of Christ not included in the New Testament and throw light on the intimate relationship between Jesus and his disciples.

FIRST SENTENCE {INTRODUCTION}: Jewish beliefs marked Christianity permanently until the fourth century, when Jewish Christians who had been prominent in the New Testament were reduced to a remnant.

MEMORABLE MOMENT {PAGE 173: THE SOPHIA OF JESUS CHRIST}: He meditated with his bride Sophia
and his first offspring was born,
an androgyne.

His male part is named
the Son of God.

His female part,
the Sophia,
Mother of the Universe.

MY THOUGHTS: One might think this an odd choice for someone who isn't of the faith but, interested in religions/spirituality to begin with, I was particularly eager to learn what insights a women (IE Mary Magdalene) might have to offer ... if any.

Of beautiful quality, I can't tell you how much I was impressed by this edition of the Gnostic Gospels that, after a forward by the author, included ...

  • The Fable of the Pearl
  • The Gospel of Thomas
  • The Gospel of Mary Magdalene
  • Melchizedek
  • The Gospel of Philip
  • Poimandres
  • The Apocalypse of the Great Power
  • The Sophia of Jesus Christ
  • Human Suffering
  • The Gospel of Truth
  • The Greatest Human Evil is Forgetfulness of God
  • The Secret Book According to St John I, II and III
  • Thunder
  • The Gospel of Judas

Arguably at a bit of a disadvantage in that my understanding of the Bible is at best rudimentary, I think I struggled in so much as I wasn't able to read this selection of omitted texts/excerpts from texts with any real sense of context. However, that said, I found some of them quite thought provoking and, to my surprise, some immensely moving.


22 Dec 2016

(CARR FAMILY #1): WHAT KATY DID.

WHAT KATY DID by SUSAN COOLIDGE. (Illustrated by Susan Hellard)

PUBLICITY BLURB: 

Selling Points:
  • New edition of a widely loved children's classic, which is fondly remembered by generations of readers
  • Featuring stunning illustrations by Susan Hellard, who will bring Katy to 21st century readers. Her work is zingy and dynamic just like Katy herself
  • Contains extra material for young readers, including a Test Yourself quiz, a character guide, and a section about Susan Coolidge's life.
Series: Alma Children's Classics
November 17th 2016
£6.99
978-1-84749-607-2
246 pp . PB
Subject: YFA
Age Range: 9-11
CBMC: D3N79

DESCRIPTION: Katy, a twelve-year-old gangly tomboy, dreams of blossoming into a sophisticated young woman, capable of grand deeds and adventures. She is however prone to mischief, and leads her six siblings into various scrapes, much to the annoyance of her kindly father and domineering aunt. Her life is turned upside down by a terrible accident, which leaves her a bedridden invalid. Now she is forced to learn the virtues of patience, sacrifice and hopefulness, as she comes to terms with her disability.

A heart-warming tale that has become a children’s classic since its publication in 1872, Susan Coolidge’s What Katy Did is a lesson in the value of good humour and perseverance against the odds for young readers. Beautifully illustrated by Susan Hellard, this is a poignant and timeless story that every child should read.


FIRST SENTENCE {1. The Little Carrs}: I was sitting in the meadows one day, not long ago, at a place, where there was a small brook.

MEMORABLE MOMENT {Page 125}: Swinging to and fro like the pendulum of a great clock, she gradually rose higher and higher, driving herself along by the motion of her body and striking the floor smartly with her foot at every sweep.

SOURCE: Received from the publishers Alma Books.

MY THOUGHTS: One of the few books from my childhood that I've re-read as an adult and actually enjoyed.

I remember thinking of Katy as a hybrid of my (naughty) little sister and myself ... perhaps the reason I loved her? Whilst not exactly naughty, highly imaginative (like myself), she is one of those children who things just seem to happen to (my sister). Her family what I suppose you could describe as 'salt of the earth' types, in all honesty the whole tone of the book is a tad moralistic.

Carefree to begin with, we get to see another side of Katy's character as she is left bed ridden whereupon the message about not wallowing in self pity etc is driven home.

Written at a time (the mid 1800's) when disability was looked upon very differently. I guess if I were to be overly critical about this book it would be about this aspect of the story but as it is, all in all, as charming a read as I remember it. Katy is essentially spirited enough to appeal to the little girls of today and is likely to prove a nostalgic hit with those who remember the story from their own childhood. 


21 Dec 2016

A SONG FOR TOMORROW.

A SONG FOR TOMORROW by ALICE PETERSON.

An Uncorrected proof copy, not for sale or quotation. A Song For Tomorrow is not available until February 9th 2017. However if you click on the book title it will take you to amazon.co.uk where you can view the synopsis and what I'm presuming is the actual cover image. 

SOURCE: A GoodReads win.

MY THOUGHTS: Whilst not impossible to write a novel of this kind without it, I do think having experience of the challenges faced by those with a chronic (possibly life limiting) condition often brings a whole new dimension, a certain empathy if you will, to the writing. And, based on the author's own experiences after she too was diagnosed with a chronic condition, A Song For Tomorrow is nothing if not empathetic towards its characters. Yes, even those who you at first might think totally undeserving of it.

Told from multiple points of views, there is always the danger that the narrative becomes confused, the different threads lost, if only momentarily, along the way. No such worries here. The narrative flows seamlessly, Alice (loosely based on singer/songwriter Alice Martineau) and 'love interest' Tom's thoughts along with Alice's mother Mary's diary entries each adding to the telling of an exceptional fictional story of one young woman's struggle with a chronic lung condition as she fulfils her wish to become a singer/song writer.

Gritty, the author pulls no punches when it comes to the ramifications (both realised and possible) of Alice's condition, a box of tissues is highly recommended, but most of all this is a life affirming novel of making the most of every day, of following your dreams.

One of my favourite reads of 2016, everything I was hoping for and so, so much more. I had anticipated the ending going one of several ways and, without giving away the merest hint of a spoiler, am so pleased that it ended the way it did.


20 Dec 2016

YULETIDE BLESSINGS.


TWAS THE NIGHT BEFORE YULETIDE
Generally credited as being by C.C. Williford though the exact author is unknown.*
(If you know who exactly wrote this poem please leave a comment in the comment box in order that I may give full credit to that person. Thank you. TT)


Twas the night before Yuletide and all through the glen
Not a creature was stirring, not a fox, not a hen.
A mantle of snow shone brightly that night
As it lay on the ground, reflecting moonlight.
The faeries were nestled all snug in their trees,
Unmindful of flurries and a chilly north breeze.
The elves and the gnomes were down in their burrows,
Sleeping like babes in their soft earthen furrows.
When low! The earth moved with a thunderous quake,
Causing chairs to fall over and dishes to break.
The Little Folk scrambled to get on their feet
Then raced to the river where they usually meet.
“What happened?” they wondered, they questioned, they probed,
As they shivered in night clothes, some bare-armed, some robed.
“What caused the earth’s shudder? What caused her to shiver?”
They all spoke at once as they stood by the river.
Then what to their wondering eyes should appear
But a shining gold light in the shape of a sphere.
It blinked and it twinkled, it winked like an eye,
Then it flew straight up and was lost in the sky.
Before they could murmur, before they could bustle,
There emerged from the crowd, with a swish and a rustle,
A stately old crone with her hand on a cane,
Resplendent in green with a flowing white mane.
As she passed by them the old crone’s perfume,
Smelling of meadows and flowers abloom,
Made each of the fey folk think of the spring
When the earth wakes from slumber and the birds start to sing.
“My name is Gaia,” the old crone proclaimed
in a voice that at once was both wild and tamed,
“I’ve come to remind you, for you seem to forget,
that Yule is the time of re-birth, and yet…”
“I see no hearth fires, hear no music, no bells,
The air isn’t filled with rich fragrant smells
Of baking and roasting, and simmering stews,
Of cider that’s mulled or other hot brews.”
“There aren’t any children at play in the snow,
Or houses lit up by candles’ glow.
Have you forgotten, my children, the fun
Of celebrating the rebirth of the sun?”
She looked at the fey folk, her eyes going round,
As they shuffled their feet and stared at the ground.
Then she smiled the smile that brings light to the day,
“Come, my children,” she said, “Let’s play.”
They gathered the mistletoe, gathered the holly,
Threw off the drab and drew on the jolly.
They lit a big bonfire, and they danced and they sang.
They brought out the bells and clapped when they rang.
They strung lights on the trees, and bows, oh so merry,
In colours of cranberry, bayberry, cherry.
They built giant snowmen and adorned them with hats,
Then surrounded them with snow birds, and snow cats and bats.
Then just before dawn, at the end of their fest,
Before they went homeward to seek out their rest,
The fey folk they gathered ‘round their favourite oak tree
And welcomed the sun ‘neath the tree’s finery.
They were just reaching home when it suddenly came,
The gold light returned like an arrow-shot flame.
It lit on the tree top where they could see from afar
The golden-like sphere turned into a star.
The old crone just smiled at the beautiful sight,
“Happy Yuletide, my children,” she whispered. “Good night.

Wishing you all well this Yuletide Eve and throughout the coming year,




18 Dec 2016

ANNOUNCING THE FIRST BOOK OF THE YEAR AND THE WHAT'S IN A NAME CHALLENGE 2017.

Thank goodness 2016 is coming to an end. A bit like Queen Elizabeth a few years ago, this year has proved to be an annus horribilis. Still, determined not to be totally miserable I do have the ......


..... to look forward to.

Honoured to have been featured reading my First Book Of The Year 2016 I'm delighted to have been asked again.

Then there's the .....




 (Details and sign-up here)


Hosted by Charlie over at The Worm Hole, the 2017 categories are (Charlie's suggestions in brackets) ...


  • A number in numbers (84, Charing Cross Road; 12 Years A Slave; 31 Dream Street)
  • A building (The Old Curiosity Shop; I Capture The Castle; House Of Shadows; The Invisible Library; Jamaica Inn)
  • A title which has an ‘X’ somewhere in it (The Girl Next Door; The Running Vixen)
  • Compass direction (North and South; Guardians Of The West; The Shadow In The North; NW)
  • An item/items of cutlery (The Subtle Knife; Our Spoons Came From Woolworths)
  • A title in which at least two words share the same first letter – alliteration! (The Great Gatsby; The Luminous Life Of Lilly Aphrodite; Gone Girl; The Cuckoo’s Calling).
Hmm!Always one to challenge myself that bit further. As well as 'the challenge rules', I like to make things that bit more difficult for myself (and indeed Mr Terry who if you remember was dispatched to local charity is search of suitable books for this year's challenge) by using books we already have in the house soooo, with this in mind, which books might I find myself reading?

  • Number in numbersHmm, looks like Mr T will be paying a trip to the charity shops after all. Oh, hang on, I've just found a copy of 11th Hour by James Patterson tucked away on my TBR pile 
  • BuildingThe Far Pavilions by M.M Kaye, To The Holy Shrines by Richard Burton
  • 'X' in itWessex Tales by Thomas Hardy, Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides
  • Compass directionAll Quiet On The Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque, Hunt For the Southern Continent by James Cook
  • CutleryThe Subtle Knife by Philip Pullman
  • First same letterGone Girl by Gillian Flynn, Jaguars And Electric Eels by Alexander von Humboldt

Any plans to be joining in with the 2017 What's In A Name Challenge? If so, any clues as to what you might be reading?

17 Dec 2016

THE CHRYSALIDS & TROUBLE WITH LICHEN.

Not just one book but two by JOHN WYNDHAM, both of them bought at a library sale.

THE CHRYSALIDS (Also published as Re-Birth).

AMAZON.CO.UK BLURB: Click on book title for synopsis.

FIRST SENTENCE {1}: When I was quite small I would sometimes dream of a city - which was strange because it began before I even knew what a city was.

MEMORABLE MOMENT {Page 67/68}:  Mary said afterwards that he hummed and ha'd for an un-conscionable time while he examined the baby in minutest detail. At last however, he emerged, with an expressionless face. In the little-used sitting-room he sat down at the table and fussed for a while about getting a good point on his quill. At last he took a form from his pouch, and in a slow, deliberate hand wrote that he officially found the child to be a true female human being, free from any detectable form of deviation. 

MY THOUGHTS: The story of a society struggling to rebuild itself after what I presume is some kind of post nuclear war and one of the most thought provoking books I've read in a while. 

As strange as it seems I couldn't help but think of the Salem witch hunts with Elias Strorm as some kind of latter day witch hunter general intent on sniffing out 'abominations' whether they be human, animal or indeed plants as opposed to witches. 

One of the most chilling apocalyptic  novels I've ever read. Made all the more so by the fact that the descriptions are subtle, almost neutral, and yet somehow deeply menacing all at the same time. The author having a wonderful way of planting a seed in the readers mind inviting us to fill in 'the blanks'. 

TROUBLE WITH LICHEN

AMAZON.CO.UK BLURB: Click on book title for synopsis.

FIRST SENTENCE: The farewell was beautiful.

MEMORABLE MOMENT {Page 43}: 'But now that you have an independent income -' her mother protested.

'I know, darling. A sensible girl would go out and buy herself a husband.'

MY THOUGHTS: A good read, thought provoking, just not as gripping as The Chrysalids. 

A slow start or is it more a case that the narrative is less intense. Either way, what an ending, not at all what I was expecting. 

Intrigued by its female protagonist, something else I wasn't expecting, for me it wasn't so much the lichen (and its unexpected life prolonging properties) in itself that made the book as the exploration of feminism as the author explores the notion of longevity as a means of  female emancipation.


15 Dec 2016

(THE BAST MYSTERIES) BELL, BOOK AND MURDER.

BELL, BOOK AND MURDER by ROSEMARY EDGHILL.

BACK COVER BLURB:  Like Susan Isaacs, Rosemary Edghill casts a keenly observant, friendly, yet faintly amused eye on an intriguing American micro-culture. Like The Witches Of Eastwick,  the Bast novels offer a very new view of the practitioners of a very old faith. Edghill allows that there's still magic in the air.

Shakespeare's witches and their blasted heath couldn't be farther from the world of Rosemary Edghill's contemporary Wiccans. Today's witches hold coven meetings in New York City apartments and buy their books and supplies in cheerful neighbourhood shops. They even hold regular jobs - well, sort of regular. Bast, a.k.a. Karen Hightower, is a freelance graphic artist - the flexible hours leave her plenty of time for covenmeets, gossip sessions, and, just, lately, a little detective work.

Even good-hearted, nature-loving Wiccans aren't immune to political infighting, greed, and jealousy. In a community where everybody knows everybody else's business, where cliques turn into covens, and where sexual relationships can have more than ordinary power, passion can quickly turn to murder.

Armed with a quick brain and a clever tongue, Bast pokes into the dark corners of the Wiccan world and finds Truth of more than one kind.

Bell, Book, and Murder contains the complete text of all three Bast novels, Speak Daggers to Her, Book of Moons, and the first softcover edition of The Bowl of Night as excerpted in USA Today.*

FIRST SENTENCES: 
Speak Daggers To Her {1. Friday, June 15, 5:20pm}: I could say this was any large Eastern city, but you'd know it was New York.
Book Of Moons {1. Saturday, April 9, 4:45 pm}: It was a Saturday morning in the middle of April and I was at the studio.
The Bowl Of Night {1. Friday, October 6}: I hate Halloween.

MEMORABLE MOMENT {Book Of Moons, page 180}: Belle was dressed for the picnic in one of her Public Awareness Outreach ritual robes, the ones she wears when she's being an 'official' Witch in the mundane world. It was tie-dyed in purple and pink and painted all over in gold pentacles, and made Belle lok the way it was supposed to, which was harmless, accessible and nonthreatening. The robe was clinched at the middle with a gold glitter sash and she was carrying a wand stuck through that: a carved rowan twig with a faceted crystal suncatcher in the tip. She looked like the advance man for Glinda the Good.

SOURCE: Borrowed from a friend.

MY THOUGHTS: One of those books I came to with no preconceived ideas whatsoever. Would the book(s) concentrate more on Bast's lifestyle as a modern day Witch and if so would they be stereotypical of what people think a modern Witch is? Would they concentrate more on the mysteries and if so would they be well plotted or would the twists be predictable and easily spotted?

Overall a book I'd rate as 'OK'. However ... 

If asked to rate the Wiccan/Neo-Pagan element of the story alone I'd have to go with three stars ('I liked it'), to me it was the mystery element that let the book(s) down (the who/why-they-dun-it pretty obvious early on) along with, to a greater or lesser extent ...

The writing style. A purely personal preferance but the stream of consciousness approach which the author seemed to favour just isn't altogether to my taste. Then there was the tendency towards repetition to say nothing of the use of slang which I found incredibly frustrating at times.

Then there was the fact I found certain aspects of Book Of Moons too similar to Speak Daggers To Her - dare I say verging on a re-hash? Something that might not have been of such a concern if I'd read the books as separate novels rather than presented as 'three books in one' as was the case in Bell, Book And Murder.

Not to dwell on the negatives though. As I said I enjoyed the Pagan aspect, finding the themes of religious intolerance and even downright bigotry (especially in the Bowl Of Night which was by far my favourite book of the three) fascinating if somewhat shocking reading. 

Then there was Bast (aka Karen). A character I found to be wonderfully quirky, frustratingly naive, resourceful and yet blind to the obvious, all in equal measure. In other words a perfectly rounded character unlike some of the others who, well, lets just say I didn't feel were all they might be. 

* Synopsis & Details ...

14 Dec 2016

THE FIRST POST OF THE MONTH (JANUARY TO DECEMBER 2016) IN WORDS AND IMAGES.


Inspired by something I first saw on Suko's Notebook some years ago now, today I'd like to share the first post of the month, January to December 2016 ...

JANUARY >>> First Book Of The Year: 2016: Hosted by Sheila (Book Journey) the 1st of January saw me joining in The First Book Of The Year, an event that sees readers the world over sharing what they will be reading come the start of the new year.
FEBRUARY >>> From Flying Bunnies to Pastafarians: Just a few of the headlines to have caught my attention this week: with everything from a rooftop 'rabbit drama' to The Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster via a stripping ninja and a drive.by yoghurt attack.



MARCH >>> The Double Axe (Blood & Fire #1): The first instalment in a series of books that, re-imagining some of the classic myths from the point of view of their teenage protagonists, gives today's young readers an introduction to 'classic mythology'. 


APRIL >>> Bones Are Forever/Bones of The Lost: From a new born baby found wedged in a vanity cabinet to a teenager discovered along a desolate highway, April 1st saw me review books 15 and 16 in the Tempe Brennan series.


MAY >>> Siren: Quite different from her first book, A Parachute in The Lime Tree, I was delighted to discover what else Annemarie Nearey was capable of in a book that proved to be incredibly powerful stuff.

The Language of Flowers by Vanessa DiffenbaughJUNE >>> The Language Of Flowers: One of several books I read as an honorary member of the Arkansas Book Club.


JULY >>> ROFL 2016: From the nonsense words that make us laugh to some of the cartoons that made me laugh via the funniest jokes ever ... as chosen by scientists.


AUGUST >>> The Krakow Klub:  The story of one man's attempt to live a normal life, even though he is not normal in what I'd describe as a science-fiction conspiracy novel with chilling political overtones.

SEPTEMBER >>> Lovefilm: August '16: With everyone from Melissa McCarthy and Bill Murray in St Vincent, Joseph Fiennes in Luther, Lily Tomlin in Grandma and Helen Mirren in Eye In The Sky September certainly wasn't without its stars.

OCTOBER >>> A Man Called Ove: What has to be my favourite read of the year, right from the beginning I was captivated by the delightfully grouchy, querulous and yet lovable character that is Ove.


NOVEMBER >>> Wondrous Words Wednesday, Alma Books Children's Book Month ... Oh And A Pumpkin: With everything from WWW, meme that several of my fellow bloggers feature on their blogs, Alma Book's Children's Book Of The Month to the pumpkin carved by Mr T.

DECEMBER >>> The Ashes Of Berlin: Set in a country ravaged, its citizens impoverished, its children orphans, its newly re-formed police force vying for control of the streets, an ex-World War II intelligence officer come police inspector Gregor Reinherdt is as mistrusted by his colleagues as he is mistrusting of them.