Monday, 31 March 2014

Author Spotlight: Simon Bond, author of 'Jesus Came From Outer Space'

SIMON BOND is a father of five with a deep love of science fiction. He released his first book JESUS CAME FROM OUTER SPACE in the summer of 2013 and is now working on his next book! I have had the pleasure of speaking with him recently and I have to say he is an incredibly lovely man who really cares about his craft!

I recently downloaded his novel and although I haven't read it yet, I am pretty sure I am going to love it, given the reviews I have read!

SYNOPSIS: 

A midlife crisis can hit a Man at anytime, and this certainly feels the case for our main character Dan Rathbone. With kid's in tow and a wife shipped all the way from Germany, Dan's life is about to change - will he meet people he never knew for the better? Who knows?. His mental state is starting to crumble -  are the visions he is having just in his head or are they real?. A UFO believer, his nightmare is about to start, who said going the circus was all that fun...

Described in many of the reviews as an amusing take on sci-fi, I can definitely see why. Merging aliens, a circus and a mid life crisis? What's not to love? I am intrigued as to the Jesus element to see how the story develops! 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Simon is a father of five children, two of which are twins - he certainly has his hands full! You may wonder how he manages to write as well (I struggle with just the one!) but he takes his craft seriously and has even started work on the first chapter of his second book! Why not go and support a UK author by buying his book (it is currently available to download for a bargain price of £1.53, why not treat yourself?) or by taking a look at his website? Perhaps give him a follow on one of his social networks (FACEBOOK/TWITTER/G+). 

I am really into supporting independent authors at the moment - why not share your support too?

Friday, 28 March 2014

Summoned by Rainy Kaye:Review

Amazon / Goodreads

Summoned is a new take on genie folk law; it focus on a paranormal bond between master and genie, a bond that is passed along from one generation to the next, passing from father to eldest son, only being given to a daughter when she is the only one inline.

Dimitri is 21 years old, he is the genie of multimillionaire Karl Walker and he has to do anything that is wished of him, from stealing, to kidnap even murder. He doesn't know how his family became tied to the Walkers, he just knows it's all he can do to fulfil Karl's every wish or he is tormented by a never ending noise inside his head. 

The book opens with Dimitri kidnapping a child and admitting that murder is so much easier, of course being a genie means he had rules to live by, such as, never telling anyone he was a genie; it was after all forbidden and he has never allowed himself to form relationships; as he never knew when he might be summoned, but then - that night after the kidnapping, he meets Syd and perhaps Syd won't let him let her go and perhaps Dimitri doesn't want her to either. 

Karl only used to call Dimitri once every few months, but things have changed - he has started to summon him every few days and Dimitri is sure something is going on, in fact he is so sure he even asks Sylvia, Kyles completely messed up only child, who just can't wait to get her hands (in more way than one) on Dimitri to help him try and get to the bottom of it all.  

In between all the callings, the murder, theft and arson, Dimitri is slowly falling for Syd, something he knows he shouldn't be doing, he can't tell her who he is nor can he risk her finding out, as it would only end badly - but he can't keep away from the feisty Syd and she is someone who doesn't like secrets, in fact she she looking to find out just what he is hiding.   

I loved the idea of this book so much I missed one part; the fact it contained explicit content, which I have to admit I'm not a fan of, in fact by the time I reached chapter three I was almost ready to throw my hands up in defeat, due to the amount of page skipping I had done. Thankfully though I carried on, as in between those pages, was the great story I had expected from the description and as for the ending - well I have to admit I didn't see that twist coming in quite that way. 

Summoned is apparently the first release in The Summoned line and I have to say I shall definitely be picking up the next, however I wouldn't mind if perhaps they did two versions one with the explicit content for those who like it and one for me.

*I recieved a copy of this book in return for an honest review
*This post may contain affiliate links.

Friday, 21 March 2014

Unfinished Series


I love reading series of books. There’s nothing better than getting to the end of the book and knowing that there’s more to come; that these characters you have come to love don’t have to be given up just yet. Some of my favourite series include Harry Potter, The Hunger Games, the Millennium trilogy, and the ongoing A Song of Ice and Fire series.

But for every series that I devour within days of starting, there are also loads that I start and never get around to finishing, and I thought I’d share some of them with you today.



Robert Langdon by Dan Brown
I read Angels and Demons and The Da Vinci Code along with everyone else, way back when they were first released in 2006. I know that they were never considered the most literary of novels, but they were entertaining and thrilling, and I really liked them. The films were dire, particularly the adaptation of The Da Vinci Code, which managed to be both boring and ludicrous all at the same time. When The Lost Key came out after a long wait, I was quite excited to read it, and I was so massively disappointed. I really didn’t like it at all, so when it came to the fourth in the series, Inferno, I just had, and have, no desire to read it. I don’t know if there are any other Robert Langdon novels in the pipeline, but I can’t imagine I’ll be bothering with them.



Divergent by Veronica Roth
I hate those people who try to say that they liked something first, but I was pretty quick off the mark with Divergent, at least amongst my friends. I loved it. I told everyone I knew about it, and was really annoyed that I’d have to wait for so long for the second in the series. Then, when Insurgent was finally published, I didn’t read it. My friend lent it to me, and I tried to read it, but I couldn’t remember the important plot points from Divergent. I still have Insurgent sitting on my bookshelf, unread, and the third book has long since been released. Now the film of Divergent is out, so I think I’ll go and see that, and then maybe I’ll finally be ready to read Insurgent and Allegiant.



Jack Reacher by Lee Child
Reading a Jack Reacher book is like watching a ridiculously high budget action blockbuster. They are a bit rubbish, but they are so readable and addictive that when I first discovered them I read six books in this series in three months. And then, for some reason, I just stopped. I suspect I had just read too much in a short space of time, and like I said, the books aren’t brilliant, they are just ridiculously entertaining. I’m sure I’ll go back at some point and read some more, but there’s so many books to read and so little time!



Inheritance Cycle by Christopher Paolini
Another series that I started many years ago. I read the first two in this series, Eragon and Eldest, in really quick succession, and loved them. Way back then, they weren’t even my type of book particularly, but I really loved the world of Eragon and the mythology. It took quite a few years for the third book, Brisingr, to come along, and by that time, all the enthusiasm I had for the books had waned, I didn’t want to buy the book with any urgency. I still have the first two books on my bookshelf, and I often toy with the idea of rereading them and moving on to the next two, but I haven’t as yet. Maybe this year!


Are there any series of books that you want to go back and finish?

Wednesday, 19 March 2014

Bittersweet Hope by Ryann Jansen: Review

 Bittersweet Hope - Ryann Jansen / Goodreads

Audrey is 17 and spends most of her time either at work or school and trying to keep a roof above her and her sister's heads. You see their mother is a prostitute and when she's not with one of her 'men' she is off spending the proceeds on drugs to try and forget it all. But the landlord has given them an ultimatum, get the owed rent of over $1,000 by Friday, or they are out.

Audrey doesn't think things can get any worse but then her Mother is found murdered and her sisters and her and taken away into foster care, each being sent off to live with a different family.

Audrey is left struggling with her emotions she wants her sister with her, but she enjoys the feeling of being a normal teenager, having a bed to herself and clothes in her wardrobe; even the shampoo and conditioner that make her hair feel soft is a real treat and then there's her foster "brother" Caleb, he makes her head spin and heartbeat.

But there's one problem her youngest sister seems to be following in their mother's footsteps spurred on by the other foster child in the family she was sent to and more than anything this scares Audrey. Can she find a way to save her sister, will she really get a happy ending or is she doomed to live in sadness.

Bittersweet Hope is the first offering from Ryann Jansen and I have to admit I was completely drawn into the pages - I wanted Audrey to be ok and happy; her sister's safe and living the life every teenager should be allowed to without fear and in a safe and secure environment. I would have loved it, to have gone a bit more in depth, delve into this dark issues more, but as a YA book, perhaps it does just enough for the younger end of the audience.

I look forward to hopefully reading more from Ryann Jensen and seeing how she progresses an author - I think perhaps she might just become one of my favourites.

*I recieved a copy of this book in return for an honest review
*This post may contain affiliate links.

Guest Review: The Bone Season by Samantha Shannon

The Bone Season by Samantha Shannon


Samantha Shannon has published her debut book called The Bone Season and I can only hope that it is the first of many.  Set in a dystopian future in the year 2059, we follow the story of Paige Mahoney, a nineteen year old girl on who works in Seven Dials.  Paige is no ordinary girl though, she has a special talent, one that has given her work in the criminal underword of Scion.  


Paige is clairvoyant, a gift some might some, but for the government of Scion, this is classed as treason.  The sheer fact that Paige is alive, is reason for her detainment by the authorities and it is one of the things she fears.  


Life as she knows it is altered in ways she could never imagine when she is hunted down and kidnapped.  Taken to a secretive Oxford she is greeted with what can only be described as a terrifying and unfamilliar sight, she is plunged into a fight for her life and that of her fellow captives.


Without wanting to give too much away, I will say that Shannon takes the reader on a completely new journey, like none I have been a part of before in all my years of reading.  The heroine is fierce and unforgiving, challenged with and pitted against a set of circumstances that is both familiar and completely unique at the same time.  This conflict makes for some of the most incrediblly vivid and exciting scenes to leap from the page of a book in years.


Shannon articulates and paints the story around your imagination, placing you in the center of a battle you will have never witnessed before.  A world is laid out before you, with maps and hierarchies to help you make sense of the complex nature of the story as it unfolds.


All in all, I can not recommend this book highly enough.  If you like a good dystopian piece of fiction, but are looking for something you have never encountered before, then read The Bone Season, you wont find disappoint on a single page of the book!

This was a guest review by Erika from Eclectic Enchantments - please do pop over to her blog and say hi!

Monday, 17 March 2014

The Montana Gallagher Collection Book Boost & Giveaway

The Montana Gallagher Collection Book Boost & Giveaway!

"Where words, romance, and adventure meet."


About The Collection
BOOK ONE - Gallagher's Pride
She was on a quest of discovery. He was on a quest for revenge. Together they would discover a second chance. Brenna Cameron travels from Scotland after losing someone she loves in search of family she didn't know existed. Alone now in the world, Brenna makes an arduous journey, following the trail of discovery to Briarwood, Montana. Here she meets Ethan Gallagher, and the rest of the Gallagher clan. Only with their help is she able to discover lost family, heal old wounds, and embark on a treacherous confrontation with a man who destroyed her family. As head of the Gallagher clan, Ethan has more than enough to occupy his thoughts and time he didn't need the complication of Brenna Cameron and he certainly didn't need the trouble that came with her. Ethan takes on the unwanted duty of self-appointed protector to the headstrong Scot, only to discover there is such a thing as second chances and more to life than revenge.
BOOK TWO - Gallagher's Hope
She sought a new beginning.He sought what he didn't know was missing. Together they would discover hope in unlikely places. Isabelle Rousseau must escape New Orleans and the memory of her family's tragic loss. With her younger brother in tow, she accepts a position as the new schoolteacher in Briarwood, Montana. Desperate to keep what's left of her family together, Isabelle joins her life with a stranger only to discover that trust and hope go hand in hand. Gabriel Gallagher lived each day as it came believing he had everything he could possibly want . . . until a determined woman and her brother arrive with a little luggage and a lot of secrets. It will take a drastic choice to protect her and give them both hope for the future.
BOOK THREE -  Gallagher's Choice
He finally had a family to call his own. She now knew what it meant to risk it all. Together they had a chance to find peace at last. Eliza Gallagher is tough, resilient, and rides a horse like she was born in the saddle. All necessary qualities for someone who runs a cattle ranch. She had more to avenge than any of them and she was counting on those skills to finally find the justice they all sought -- until she realized it could cost her everything and everyone she loved. Ramsey Hunter finally knew what it was to have a family and what it took to keep that family together. He knew coming back wouldn’t be easy, but he never imagined what he would have to risk to keep it. Eliza got him home; now Ramsey has to do whatever it takes to save her life and help bring peace to Hawk’s Peak.

About The Author

MK McClintock published her first novel, Gallagher's Pride, in July 2012, and followed one month later with the release of her second book in the same series, Gallagher's Hope. Her third novel, Alaina Claiborne, was published in January 2013. Gallagher's Choice, the third book in her Gallagher Series, was released in August 2013. She is now working on her next story. 
 
McClintock dreams of a time when life was simpler, the land rougher, and the journey more rewarding. With her heart deeply rooted in the past and her mind always on adventure, she lives and writes in Montana. 
 
McClintock is a member of Romance Writers of America, Montana Romance Writers, and Women Writing the West. 

Connect with MK!
Website  *  Goodreads  *  Facebook  *  Pinterest  *  YouTube  *  Amazon  *  Blog

ENTER THE GIVEAWAY!
The author is giving away these fabulous prizes!
Prize 1 - $50

OR


Prize Two
*Any entrants for the gift card. For the book set and blanket, US winners only.*

Sunday, 16 March 2014

Showcase Sunday

It's me, Bex! Again. I don't have a book buying obsession...honestly! I am linking up with Books, Biscuit and Tea once again for Showcase Sunday! So what have I got this week?



I recently took part in a book swap and so four of these books are from the lovely Sarah from Pookledo. The rules were to choose 3-4 books that you thought the other would love! These are the titles she sent me:

Sleepyhead - Mark Billingham (Goodreads/Amazon) - This really seems like something I would like!

Anne Of Green Gables - L.M Montgomery (Goodreads/Amazon) - I actually own this but seem to have misplaced my copy. Need to re read it to refresh my memory.

Spilling the Beans - Clarissa Dickson Wright (Goodreads/Amazon) - I remember watching Clarissa Dickson Wright back when I was younger on her cookery show, Two Fat Ladies. I never realised she had a book out but I am definitely interested in reading this.

Walking With Ghosts - John Baker (Goodreads/Amazon) - Definitely seems like a book for me! Will be taking this away with me as I believe it will be a quick read for me.

Cured - Bethany Wiggins (Goodreads/Amazon) - I loved the first book so pre-ordered the sequel and it arrived this week! Squee!

Sweet Dreams, Little One (Goodreads/Amazon) - This was sent to me for the purpose of review, a review which will be posted up on my parenting and lifestyle blog, Futures. It seems a very interesting story.

What have you picked up this week?

Monday, 10 March 2014

Bangkok Transit by Eva Fejos: Spotlight

bangkok banner  

ABOUT THE BOOK

bangkok

Bangkok: a sizzling, all-embracing, exotic city where the past and the present intertwine. It’s a place where anything can happen… and anything really does happen. The paths of seven people cross in this metropolis. Seven seekers, for whom this city might be a final destination. Or perhaps it is only the start of a new journey? A successful businessman; a celebrated supermodel; a man who is forever the outsider; a young mother who suddenly loses everything; a talented surgeon, who could not give the woman he loved all that she desired; a brothel’s madam; and a charming young woman adopted at birth. Why these seven? Why did they come to Bangkok now, at the same time? Do chance encounters truly exist?

Bangkok Transit is a Central European best-seller. The author, Eva Fejos, a Hungarian writer and journalist, is a regular contributor to women’s magazines and is often herself a featured personality. Bangkok Transit was her first best-seller, which sold more than 100,000 copies and is still selling. Following the initial publication of this novel in 2008, she went on to write twelve other best-sellers, thus becoming a publishing phenomena in Hungary According to accounts given by her readers, the author’s books are “therapeutic journeys,” full of flesh and blood characters who never give up on their dreams. Many readers have been inspired to change the course of their own lives after reading her books. “Take your life into your own hands,” is one of the important messages the author wishes to convey.

PURCHASE THE BOOK

   

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

 eva Eva Fejos worked in one of the largest Hungarian women’s magazines, NÅ‘k Lapja (Women’s Journal), as a journalist from 2001 until 2012. She was the recipient of both the Award for Quality Journalism and the Award for Excellence.


She is tremendously fond of traveling. Her many experiences give a personal touch to her exciting, propelling, and exotic novels. Fejos's first Hungarian best-seller book, Bangkok transit, reached the top of the best-seller list within one month of its publication.


Following the initial publication of this novel in 2008, she has gone on to write twelve other best-sellers, making her a publishing phenomena in Hungary. According to the many accounts given by her readers, the author's books are "therapeutic journeys," full of flesh and blood characters who never give up on their dreams. Many readers have been inspired to change the course of their own lives after reading her books. "Take your life into your own hands" is one of the important messages the author wishes to convey.

Visit the author's Website Eva's Facebook Eva's Goodreads Eva's Twitter

This tour is brought to you by Worldwind Virtual Book Tours!

To view the entire Bangkok Transit Tour, click HERE

Sunday, 9 March 2014

Showcase Sunday

That's right, it's Showcase Sunday time again. What have I picked up in the past week?

First up is my final win from Goodreads which took much longer to arrive than the others which is Only Time Will Tell - Jeffrey Archer.

I then picked up quite a few Kindle freebies and a couple that I couldn't resist - from L-R:

Deadly Gamble - Connie Shelton | Telling Lies - Cathi Stoler | 
Project ELE - Rebecca Gober & Courtney Nuckels | Off The Grid - Dan Kolbert |
 Wings Of A Dream - Anne Mateer | Unintended Consquences - Les Lunt | 
A Change Of Heart - Adrienne Vaughan | Savor - Megan Duncan | 
Night Marchers - Rebecca Gober & Courtney Nuckels | Letters To My Mother - Rebecca Heath | Rumors: A Novella - Erica Kiefer | Heartbreak Trail - Shirley Kennedy | 
Who Is Evelyn Dae? - Sarah & Matthew La Fleur | Shucked - Megg Jensen

My final book is Life After Life - Kate Atkinson. I picked this up for the Bloggers Kindle Book Club that I have joined - I am really excited to start reading this in the next couple of days. Why not join us? You can read more about it in Alyssa's post here.

What have you picked up this week?s

Thursday, 6 March 2014

Looking For La La by Ellie Campbell

I wasn't sure what to expect when it came to reading Looking for La La. I went into it expecting a cosy little mystery and was astounded by how much action one little area of Crouch End could handle!

Cathy is a stay at home mum who lives for her Tuesday Twice Monthlies nights out where she can gossip the night away with her friends. She feels unwanted and unappreciated by Declan with his smarmy little comments so when he receives a mysterious postcard from La La, this leads Cathy on an eventful chase as she aims to find out who La La is once and for all.

I have to say that I didn't particularly like Cathy as a character for the first few chapters. Yes, she is a stay at home mum and yes, they do get a hard rap but it seems as if she was written to be as obnoxious and clueless as she possibly could. Only once she really got her teeth into the La La case did I start to like her. I also found myself disliking Declan to a great degree. Despite his major stress at work, he needn't have treated Cathy like he did - he would have been doing exactly the same if she was the one receiving the postcards! Indeed, his jealousy did pop up a number of times.

Cathy's friendship group certainly divided me - some I really liked and others I could have done without. They seemed like such a mismatched group of friends which I suppose they were meant to be - and of course, their differences lead to a heady conclusion.

I loved this book - despite disliking two of the main characters at the start (but having fallen completely in love with them by the end), I somehow think the book was written this way - as if to showcase why Cathy resents Declan and vice versa and how someone plays on these feelings to open up a whole can of worms. I really recommend this to anyone who is looking for a fast paced mystery with just a smidgen of suburban life.

I give this 4 stars. Below are the press release and an excerpt - why not take a peek?




In a recent survey 65% of mothers admitted feeling undervalued, over-criticised and constantly tired. 

Cathy is no exception. Her dull, uneventful days as a stay at home, mother of two, are radically transformed however with the arrival of a heavily lipsticked postcard addressed to husband, Declan. Who is the mysterious La La? Could Declan really be having an affair? And is Cathy actually being stalked?
Whatever – it will definitely prove riveting gossip for the Tuesday Twice Monthlies, Cathy’s 'Mothers Restaurant Research’ group where scandal flows as recklessly as the wine. But what starts as a light-hearted investigation with best friend Raz, soon turns into something much more sinister. 

With a possible murderer on the scene, a sexy admirer igniting long-forgotten sparks, and all her friends hiding secrets, it’s not only Cathy’s marriage that’s in jeopardy. Add in the scheming antics of Declan’s new assistant, the stress of organising the school Save The Toilet’s dance and the stage is set for a dangerous showdown and some very unsettling, possibly deadly, revelations.
Pages: 322

Notes
Ellie Campbell is a pseudonym for sisters, Pam Burks and Lorraine Campbell who collaborate across the mighty Atlantic from their respective homes in Surrey, England and Colorado, USA, finding writing together a great excuse for endless phone conversations.   Together they have written four novels How To Survive Your Sisters, When Good Friends Go Bad, Looking for La La and To Catch a Creeper.   They love any chance to connect with their readers.







CHAPTER 1

Not a sound is heard as it lands silently on the mat. No drums rolls, crashing thunder, shafts of light. The walls don’t start crumbling, the ground doesn’t vibrate with terrifying tremors and a yawning fissure fails to zigzag across the kitchen floor and separate my husband from his breakfast marmalade.
In short, I've no clue as to the impact it’ll have on our lives. Mayhem. Marital breakdown. Murder. It should at least have been written in blood or come in the beak of a dark-winged raven. 

It is a postcard. “Love from London” blazoned above a giant pair of pouting lips kissing a cherry-red heart.
At first sight it appears to be one of those “Please Come to Our Rave” flyers which get thrust through my door periodically. Now the chances of me, a world-weary, put-upon mother-of-two, going to a rave are slim to none, but heck it’s nice to be invited. 

I turn it over.

Dearest, sweetest Declan – it begins. My eyes widen as I take in the blue spidery handwriting and race to the signature. ‘Love from La La.’

A tiny blip courses through me as I beetle down the hall attempting to identify the exact emotion I’m feeling.

Jealousy?
No.

Anger?
Nah.

It’s – I recognise it now – excitement. A blip of excitement forcing its merry way around my clogged up veins.

‘Postcard for you,’ I say nonchalantly, opening the door and stepping back into the kitchen, ‘from La La.’

I had a blip when I first spotted Declan at Bubbles, a dingy disco located east of the pier in downtown Bognor Regis. It was Sandra Mason’s leaving work party and I was nineteen years old. Sandra was tear-stained and puffy faced – partly from drink, partly emotion and partly because she always had a fairly puffy face. We’d given her a pretty good send off, bought her sexy underwear and filled an enormous padded card with witty farewells and humorous poems, all of them sounding a whole bunch better than my lowly “To Sandra, All best – Cath”. 

The fifth yawn of the evening had just wormed its way out of my mouth corner, when I spied Declan dancing under a glassy mirror ball, had the blip and knew immediately we were destined to become involved. I wasn’t sure how. Perhaps he’d introduce me to a mate or better-looking brother. Not that he repelled me exactly, but spiky ginger hair had never been top of my “must haves” and the way he was swinging those hips in perfect rhythm with a blonde nymphet, well, they looked set for life. In and out they gyrated to Unchained Melody, his large hands caressing her tanned shoulder blades. I found out much later she was his long-term girlfriend, Lucy. Juicy Lucy, I labelled her. Not very original maybe but it inevitably served its purpose of getting right up Declan’s nose.

They made quite a couple. Lucy laughing, licking her glossy lips, and my future spouse leering lovingly at her, beads of sweat running down his freckled brow. I was entranced for a good few seconds before being beckoned back to earth by Sandra, who wanted an all-embracing photo of the girls from Credit Control. So, blocking out the blip, I pasted on a wide cheesy grin and darted across the room. 

Declan?’

He sits motionless, his knife suspended in the Flora margarine, blue eyes gazing into the far distance, as he listens to a heated political debate on Radio 4.

‘Postcard, darling, from La La.’ I raise my voice, aware it’ll take a more urgent tone to break that level of concentration. Either that or blasting out the latest match score. Arsenal 0 – Manchester City 2. He reminds me at times of De Niro in Awakenings, forever trapped in a catatonic state. I often wonder if I throw a ball at him whether he’d whirl round in his chair and catch it in one swift movement.

‘What?’ He finally looks up, granary toast perilously close to his open mouth. ‘Not more bills, surely?’

‘La La,’ I repeat, handing the postcard to him.

‘Who the hell’s La La?’

‘Sounds like a telly tubby,’ I return to my half-eaten boiled egg, disguising my curiosity. ‘Not sure which colour though? Ask Josh and Sophie about it tonight.’ 

Our two children have been despatched to school by Henrietta, a fellow mum. A ruse we’d come up with so we could have “quality” time with our husbands on alternate mornings. Knowing Henrietta she’ll be using her time to bonk Neil senseless. Me – I just aimed for a halfway decent conversation and constantly missed. 

He’s silently reading.

‘What does it say?’ I add a pinch of salt to the last millimetre of yolk. Declan hates that I add salt to food, wants it banned from the house, which makes it all the more decadent and delicious.

He fishes in the drawer for his wire-framed reading glasses, perches them on the end of his nose, in a way that hides his boyish face and makes him look nearer fifty than his “recently passed forty-two”. 
He clears his throat. ‘‘Dearest, sweetest Declan, I long to have you in my arms again. Ever yours.” A tinge of colour slowly works its way up his cheeks. ‘And there’s a “Love from La La” at the bottom. Well, how about that?’ He starts pacing the floor, a puzzled frown etched on his forehead.

‘So who do you think sent it?’ I ask eagerly.

‘No idea.’ The postcard’s placed on the worktop. ‘Practical joke, I guess.’

Forlornly I tackle the stack of plates lying accusingly in the sink. ‘I seriously need a dishwasher,’ I mutter, squeezing a generous helping of Fairy liquid onto a brown, greasy stain. ‘Everyone’s got one, even Patience Preston.’ Patience, mate of my closest friend, Raz, lives on her own in an immaculate flat.

‘Hmm.’

‘All she uses her fridge for is to chill vodka. Not a scrap of food’s ever marred its spotlessness.’

‘Hmmm.’

Sometimes my conversations went totally one way.

‘She skips breakfast, buys herself wraps lunchtime and eats out each evening. And yet she owns a dishwasher. All I’ve got is an empty space waiting to be filled.’

‘Patience can probably afford a dishwasher,’ he says slowly. ‘Because she has a job.’

My hackles raise a notch. ‘Ah, but she doesn’t have children to chase after all day, does she?’

‘And nor do you. Now they’re both at school till four.’

Another few notches of hackles are raised. ‘Half three actually. And I have to leave ages before that to pick them up.’ Rather than tromp through a well-planted minefield I decide to divert. ‘Did you know Patience’s mum owns a microphone once licked by Tom Jones?’ Occasionally a little falsehood helped deflect the shrapnel. 

It works, momentarily. ‘Why on earth does Tom Jones go around licking microphones?’

‘Dunno, maybe someone threw their knickers at it and knocked it into his mouth.’

He raises his eyebrow a fraction. ‘Anyhow a dishwasher’s not exactly a priority, is it? What with the roof space that needs lagging, windows needing replacing, boiler about to blow. Where the money’s coming from, I don’t know. My pockets aren't…’

His diatribe's thankfully interrupted by his ringing mobile. It’s in his hand faster than Wyatt Earp with a smoking gun.

‘Hi. Mm. Sure, sure. Sounds good. When? Ha, ha, ha. Have you asked Jessica-Ellen? Uh huh. Uh huh. Cathy? Nah she’s cool. ’Course. Eight p.m. it is.’

‘Eight p.m. it is,’ I echo under my breath as I scrub furiously at last night’s saucepan.

‘So,’ his voice is casual as he slips his phone into his pocket. ‘Wonder who sent it then?’

‘Maybe someone at work fancies you.’ My chortle halts abruptly when I turn and catch his expression. He’s not been in the mood for jokes lately, his sense of humour apparently absconding the morning of his fortieth birthday.

Besides he knows he’s attractive. I made the mistake of telling him he was voted “Body of the Year” by the Tuesday Twice-Monthlies – the Restaurant Research Group I attend each fortnight. Henrietta likens him to a ginger Nicholas Cage with his high cheekbones and well-defined eyebrows. Raz adores his muscley arms, “sex on elbows” she calls them. And everyone everywhere tells me how lucky I was in nabbing him. As if I was a total pleb who lured him with some secret charm they could never quite see in me. I want to rage at them all, ‘I was the one “nabbed” sisters. I was the one “bloody nabbed”.’ Of course being a coward, I never do.

He turns the card over. ‘If that were true, you’d think they’d pop it in my pigeonhole rather than send it to my home, wouldn’t you?’ He drops his cup into my washing up bowl. ‘Right, I’m off.’

I wipe my hands on my dressing gown as I follow him down the hall.

‘You couldn’t just take my watch to be repaired? On the bedside cabinet.’ He retrieves his umbrella from the pot by the door.

‘Sure, honey babe.’ I stand on tiptoes to tweak his tie.

‘Oh and my black boots need soles.’

‘Consider it done.’

‘And do get the kids to clear up those toys in the back garden.’ His face takes on a pained expression, strange love cards already dismissed. ‘Neighbours must wonder who they’re living next to.’ 

‘I’m on to it.’ I resist the urge to snap into a salute.

Pathetic, isn’t it? These seem to be our new roles in life. Declan barking orders, me acting the subservient housewife. Usually I’m not so wimpish but since Josh started school six months back, I realise I’m on extremely shaky ground even if it looks like the same old floor tiles. Casual mentions of spiralling debts, sharing the load or even carrying it for a change have been accumulating faster than Victoria Beckham’s Hermes handbag collection.

Too bad that as the bickering increases so does my morbid fear of rejoining the workforce. Once lodged comfortably at the back of my mind, like a suspicion of woodworm you’ll get around to dealing with later, it’s morphed to become a monstrous bugbear between us.

Rattle of keys. He’s already mentally in his office as he pecks me on the cheek. Smack of suit pocket to check for his wallet, quick comb of the hair to confirm it’s up to R A Wilson Inc standards, and he departs for work. I wave serenely on the doorstep before dashing back inside to put on Coral Duster’s Greatest Hits. 

As Coral’s dulcet tones wash over me, I head for the phone.



Disclaimer: I received this book free of charge from the author in exchange for an honest review.

Sunday, 2 March 2014

Kindle Fire Giveaway

March 2014 Kindle

Win a Kindle Fire HDX, Amazon Gift Card or Paypal Cash ($229 value)   This is a joint AUTHOR & BLOGGER GIVEAWAY EVENT! Bloggers & Authors have joined together and each chipped in a little money towards a Kindle Fire HDX 7".
The winner will have the option of receiving a 7" Kindle Fire HDX (US Only - $229 Value)
  Or $229 Amazon.com Gift Card (International)
  Or $229 in Paypal Cash (International)
  March Kindle Fire Sponsors I Am A Reader, Not A Writer Feed Your Reader The Ripple Effect Romance Series Bound 4 Escape Fae Books Author Mary Ting Giddy Over YA The Loopy Librarian Bea's Book Nook Laurie Here Bella Street's Weird Romance Bonnie Blythe's Pure Romance Immortal Ink Publishing Owl Always Be Reading Author Alecia Stone Author Heather Gray Author Camelia Miron Skiba Author Kimber Leigh Wheaton The Reporter and The Girl Author Rae Z. Ryans The Storybook Kingdom Loren Secretts Elizabeth Woodrum Paige Ryan Lori's Reading Corner Author Melissa McClone Author M.A. George Author Inger Iversen Lena Sledge Author David Pandolfe Andrea R. Cooper, Author Emily Hemmer, Author Author Jennifer Faye SA Larsen, KidLit Author More Than a Review The (Mis)Adventures of a Twenty-Something year Old Girl My Story That I Like Best Meredith & Jennifer's Musings Ally Shields Author Carol Davis Luce Author Steven Brown Author Danielle Annett The Girl Raised by Books The Stubby Pencil The YA Buzz Author Ednah Walters Author DiDi Hendley Barbara Silkstone Addicted Readers Reviews from a Bookworm Amid Summer Night Dreams Hallowed Ink Press Jennifer Allis Provost Author Rosanne Rivers Author MK McClintock Elizabeth Parkinson Bellows DE Division of Energy & Climate Awesome Romance Novels


  Sign up to sponsor the next Kindle Fire Giveaway: http://www.iamareader.com/category/kindle-giveaway-sign-ups   Giveaway Details 1 winner will receive their choice of an all new Kindle Fire 7" HDX (US Only - $229 value), $229 Amazon Gift Card or $229 in Paypal Cash (International). There is a second separate giveaway for bloggers who post this giveaway on their blog. See details in the rafflecopter on how to enter to win the 2nd Kindle Fire HDX 7". Ends 3/31/14 Open only to those who can legally enter, receive and use an Amazon.com Gift Code or Paypal Cash. Winning Entry will be verified prior to prize being awarded. No purchase necessary. You must be 18 or older to enter or have your parent enter for you. The winner will be chosen by rafflecopter and announced here as well as emailed and will have 48 hours to respond or a new winner will be chosen. This giveaway is in no way associated with Facebook, Twitter, Rafflecopter or any other entity unless otherwise specified. The number of eligible entries received determines the odds of winning. Giveaway was organized by Kathy from I Am A Reader and sponsored by the participating authors & bloggers. VOID WHERE PROHIBITED BY LAW. a Rafflecopter giveaway

Showcase Sunday

Have you noticed we are now a .co.uk? That's down to Sarah, yay! Here is another Showcase Sunday, linking up with Books, Biscuits and Tea!

For review;


The Whitechapel Virgin by Carla Acheson
(Goodreads/Amazon)

Journey into Whitechapel, London, during 'Jack the Ripper’s,' brutal reign of terror. When innocent Catherine Bell stumbles into the seedy world of Madame Davenport’s brothel lodging-house she meets lothario Edward Cross, who feels his ambitious diary of the Whitechapel area’s prostitutes will benefit favourably with her entry. Catherine soon begins to experience animosity from the women there, as well as mounting fears over Cross’s brutal and strange sexual manner. With nowhere to turn things worsen when prostitutes in the area begin to disappear one by one, only to be found murdered by a ruthless and bloody man. Soon every woman in Whitechapel is terrified and asking, who is Jack the Ripper?


I am a big fan of Jack the Ripper stories so knew I had to say yes to this!


I'm still waiting on a Goodreads win..however, I am sure it will turn up eventually! I made the mistake of counting up my physical TBR pile the other day...so many! I daren't check my Kindle! Saying that, here are some Kindle books I downloaded this week....



After Wimbledon by Jennifer Gilby Roberts
(Goodreads/Amazon)

Joe by H.D. Gordon

(Goodreads/Amazon)

The Ugly Daughter: A Memoir by Julia Legian

(Goodreads/Amazon)

Sara's Game by Ernie Lindsey

(Goodreads/Amazon)

Triton by Dan Rix

(Goodreads/Amazon)

Penny Nickels by Layce Gardner

(Goodreads/Amazon)

Over You by Christine Kersey  (Goodreads/Amazon)

The Shadow and the Rose by Amanda De Wees (Goodreads/Amazo)


What have you bought/ received/downloaded this week?