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The Amazing Edie Eckhart - The Friend Mission by Rosie Jones - Review

Tuesday, January 13, 2026


You know I love Rosie Jones' Edie Eckhart series. Edie is twelve years old and has cerebral palsy and is in the queer community. I love her so much. Ive enjoyed both books about her and am eagerly awaiting the next. I requested this at the library and they bought it for me. I love it when that happens! Libraries are so good! I hope the next person to find this book enjoys it too.

It is a World Book Day novella so it isn't very long, but I still enjoyed the story. Edie is starting Year 8 at school and there's a new girl in her class, Mia. Mia is American and she has a hearing impairment and wears hearing aids. Edie wants them to be immediate friends! And she wants to get to know Mia's twin, Benjamin! But she is a bit too enthusiastic so it takes a while to win Mia around.

There's not much else to say about this but I did really like it. I hope the next full book comes along soon! I'm giving this four out of five. 

Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin - Review

Saturday, January 10, 2026


This was the book club choice for November and it was quite a departure for us. I've had this book on my shelf for years but had never got round to it, so I was glad to have an excuse to finally get to it. I got it in a Christmas swap a few years ago. I also know a bunch of people that have raved about this book, which really made me want to read it too! 

But then I ended up really not liking it. But neither did my friend Janet, and she and I often have very similar taste in books. I slogged my way through this and was interested to see what book club made of it. Mostly people had liked it, but I felt it was one of those where if people had just had a conversation with each other things could have been much simpler. Which yes would have meant no plot, but then I wouldn't have had to read the stupid book in the first place. 

The two main protagonists are Sam and Sadie. They are both gamers. They meet firstly when Sam is in hospital when he's about twelve years old. He has been disabled in the car crash which killed his mother and is now living in LA with his grandparents. Sadie's sister has cancer and is in the same ward as Sam. Sam is playing Oregon Trail one day when Sadie comes in and starts playing too. It turns out she can visit Sam and have it count as volunteering for her bat mitzvah, and she racks up nearly a thousand hours with Sam. When he finds this out, he feels betrayed, he feels like their friendship wasn't real. The two fall out and their friendship ends. 

Then when they are about twenty they meet again. They are both at college in Boston and they end up forging a friendship again. Sadie is at college for programming and is in a relationship with one of her professors, who is a total dick. Sam and Sadie start to write a game together and it gets noticed. Eventually they start a company with Marx, who is a friend of Sam's and who has a lot of money. He wants to be in LA so he like manipulates both Sam and Sadie into moving back there. Sadie and he eventually start a relationship. Sam and Sadie fall out again and Sam does something which really annoyed me late on in the book. Mostly throughout I had a lot of sympathy for him and found Sadie really selfish, but this incident really annoyed me and left me feeling sour about him. 

There's a lot about gaming in the book which I did quite like and as I'm a casual gamer myself and married to a hardcore gamer it is something I know a lot about, but I think if you weren't in that world it would be more difficult to understand. I thought Marx was just too perfect which annoyed me too. I liked Elsewhere by Gabrielle Zevin so I was disappointed by this and can only give it two out of five. 

The Cut Throat Trial by The Secret Barrister writing as S J Fleet - Review

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

 

I was intrigued to read this book because I know the Secret Barrister from social media and thought their first book would be good. However it really didn't live up to the hype and I wouldn't try hard to read anything else by the same author. It needed a much better edit and it was confusing in parts. I also thought there were far too many points of view which I do kind of understand as a narrative device, because it's a criminal case, but it's annoying to read.

So early in the hours of New Year's Day 2024, the body of a 70 something year old man is found on the streets. He has been stabbed by an illegal knife - a zombie knife - and two youths were arrested at the scene and one was found really close by at the same time too. The three young lads are all saying that the other ones did it. There are text conversations between two of them where they talk about bashing a random person until they're dead. The prosecution has a lot of evidence - blood all over the accused, the knife, and text messages saying this was the kind of thing they might be in to. The prosecutor, Aliyah, has a lot to prove - she fucked up an earlier case and needs to repair her reputation. 

Parts of the novel are from her point of view. Parts are from the points of view of two of the accused lads. They both have had difficult lives and it wouldn't be hard to believe that they are cold killers. There's also the point of view of one of their defence lawyers, because she also has a personal interest in the case.

I really struggled with this book as I said, and can only give it three out of five. 

Tart by Becki Jayne Crossley - Review

Sunday, January 4, 2026


I got this book on Netgalley because I liked the sound of it, so thank you very much to Bloomsbury Publishing for granting me access to it. I was provided with an electronic copy of this book for review purposes, but was not otherwised compensated for this post. All thoughts and opinions are my own. 

It felt like a really long time since I had read a good YA book, especially one set in the UK, so I was keen to get stuck into this. It is set in a small town in the UK and I could picture it perfectly. 

Libby is in her first year of sixth form when a video of her kissing another boy goes viral amongst her school friends. This would be bad enough, but it happens on the same night that her boyfriend Dan gets knocked down by a car  and is in a coma. He is yet to wake up weeks, months later, and no one knows what will happen to him. Libby is ostracised and left friendless. But there's a new girl in the area - Neha. She is from a bigger area and she's proudly out and queer; she has a gaggle of queer friends that she misses dreadfully now she's had to move. She and Libby get close and Libby begins to question her feelings for Neha - but of course there is the question of Dan still. But there are a lot of secrets and explanations rattling around this book, which I felt were revealed really well. 

I really liked the book and would definitely read something else by the same author. I liked the queer representations and the queer joy that was really gentle - like Libby and her new friends visiting a cafe that they liked. I'm giving this four out of five. 

This book is out now for purchase. 

Given Vol 3 by Natsuki Kizu

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

 

Absolutely forever ago my friend Chloe lent me all the volumes of this graphic novel, which is based on a band called Given who in the first book haven't even met and who throughout the series get closer. I found them all after my move and am really trying to make my way through them mostly so I can have them back to Chloe. I've had them way too long! 

In this book Uenoyama realises he's in love with Mafuyu and they kiss each other just before the band plays their first live gig. But Uenoyama doesn't say anything to Mafuyu so they're just both confused Jaruki has a massive crush on Akhiko, but Akhiko is seeing someone else so that's really confusing too. These boys are just all useless and need to chat.

This review just doesn't need to be that long. I enjoyed the progession of the story. I liked the artwork, as previously. I'm giving this four out of five. I'm writing this in mid December, I wonder if I could get to the rest of the series soon? 

The Protest by Rob Rinder - Review

Friday, December 26, 2025


As you know from previous reviews I'm sure, I've read all of Rob Rinder's books and I actually quite rate them as far as books written by celebrities go. I've been waiting for this for months and it finally came through on my hold at the library. I guess a lot of others wanted to read it too! 

We're back with barrister Adam Green. He's got two cases to sort out. In the first one, a protestor called Lexi is arrested on the charge of murder. She's a protestor, a little bit like one from Just Stop Oil, and she throws paint or something at this world famous artist, Max something, who is at a very fancy exhibition of his work. But there's cyanide in the paint and Max dies. Lexi is immediately arrested because everyone saw her do it, but she is insistent that she didn't mean to kill him. She was protesting, yes, but nothing more. Adam believes her, so he and the solicitor he is working under must investigate her claims. Adam doesn't like Lexy and she doesn't endear herself to the reader, either, but he wants justice for her. At the root of it Adam is a fundamentally decent  fellow who wants the best for his clients. 

Meanwhile, he is defending a soldier over the death of a fellow soldier in the last days of a conflict, something like conflict in Iraq or something like that. In this, Adam is defending in barracks not in a court, and I think the jury is made up of soldiers too. As I remember, it was easy to feel sorry for all sides here, and it was interesting to see Adam in a different setting.

As with previous books, there wasn't a lot of Adam's personal life shown. There seemed to be fewer phone calls with his mother. I would like more of a look at his personal life in the future - and maybe a significant other for him! - and I will of course I'll read the next one when it's out. I'm giving this three and a half out of five. It did drag a bit for me - I think there was a bit in the middle that was a bit woolley - but overall I enjoyed it. 

The Other Woman by Tania Tay - Review

Monday, December 22, 2025


I had picked this book up at the library a couple of weeks before I went on holiday, and then thought that I should take it with me and get it read. It was the fourth book I read on holiday and I ended up finishing it on the plane home. I didn't like it much which I found a shame because I often like this kind of psychological drama. I felt like it didn't quite reach the levels I would have liked it to. The characters weren't all that brilliantly drawn, and they were cliched in parts. It annoyed me. I am glad I had a long plane ride where I could just sit and read because otherwise I think this would have festered and dragged. 

Anyway, the book is about Jade. She is thirty something, married, with three children. On the surface her life looks perfect; her children are well behaved, her husband Sam is handsome and works hard, they are rich, blah blah blah. Jade's relationship with her mum is strained because Jade is Chinese and she has never really lived up to her parents' expectations. Plus. Sam's work is keeping him busy and he seems to be pulling away from her. She is worried about a young woman who works in his office. The children are also pulling away from her as they need her less. 

So, when Christina gets in touch with Jade on Instagram, Jade is thrilled. She and Christina went to university together years and years ago, but then Christina left without any word, and Jade wasn't sure what had happened. Christina qualified as a doctor and has just moved from Scotland back to London. The two women meet and eventually Christina meets the children and Sam, who all love her, of course. Then it turns out she isn't getting on with her mother so she ends up staying with Jade and co. Jade feels pushed out of her own life.... 

This had so much promise but it just didn't live up to it. Nothing happened for the first third of the book, and a lot of stuff felt crammed into the third third. There was a hint of suspense that I liked towards the end but it just wasn't worth the pay off in the end. I'm giving it three out of five, really a two and a half out of five. 

 

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