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Five Go to Mystery Moor by Enid Blyton - Review

Friday, May 30, 2025


I recently got a collection of three Famous Five books for 99p on Kindle because I was feeling kind of nostalgic I guess. I read a lot of the Famous Five books when I was a kid, but I didn't remember this one. I had a bunch with this cover, though, that were borrowed off my uncle's family and which probably did the rounds among a bunch of us in the family when we were younger. This one was probably there, but I have totally forgotten it.

So, Anne and George are spending their holiday at a riding school with a bunch of younger children and a girl called Henrietta, who like George, prefers to be called Henry and dress as a boy. George can't stand her, but Anne basically thinks she's fine. I can't remember the exact circumstances but obviously Julian and Dick turn up too. They're also on holiday and they have to sleep in the stables because there's no room for them in the house. They of course think this is great japes, though. 

Meanwhile, a local Gypsy boy called Sniffer has brought his horse to the school for some treatment. He has a dog, Liz, who Timmy is very excited to meet. In my issue of the book the word Gypsy had been changed to the word 'traveller' which is not exactly the same thing, but never mind, and it did leave to some confusing sentences, but I do understand that it was probably done to modernise the text for a book that is over seventy years old. 

Sniffer's dad wants the horse back because the group needs to move to the middle of the moor. He gets very angry when he isn't allowed because the horse is still injured. Julian has a proper go at him, because of course, he is posh and middle class and the man isn't, so he even as a child has the right to speak to this man horribly! I really didn't like this but it was something I picked up on last year when I read Five on a Hike Together. These children really are incredibly irritating at times. 

Anyway, the Five decide to go on a camping trip to the moor together, because they just can't leave things be, and they end up finding a smuggling racket involving the travellers. Of course. I did like the ending though, with Henry coming into her own. This was a quick read of course and I just thought it was fun. Four out of five for nostalgia. 

The Magdalenes by Jeanne Skartsiaris - Review and Blog Tour

Tuesday, May 27, 2025


Hello and welcome to my blog for my stop on the tour for The Magdalenes by Jeanne Skartsiaris. It is a pleasure to welcome you here. Please do have a click round and read some of my other reviews. I read a lot of different genres. I was provided with an electronic copy of this book for review purposes, but was not otherwise compensated for this post. All thoughts and opinions are my own. 

I was intrigued by the premise of this book so signed up for the tour. I realise that this book was one of the BBNYA finalists so it's not perfect, and that is one of my main criticisms of it - it needed a bit of a better edit which did detract from my enjoyment a little bit. But I don't have a lot of criticisms and it is just me being picky. 

Jude Madigan is a lawyer, working on settlement cases for her firm. The book is set in Dallas, Texas. Jude's boss is called Drew and he has a lot of time for her. Her assistant is called Katie and she keeps trying to be Jude's friend but Jude is having none of it. The case she is working on is the settlement for a child who was in a car crash with her mother. The mother died and the child is traumatised and Jude is working on a settlement. But then Drew has a strange case for her. A woman called Trudy has died, leaving a legacy behind, and she has several letters that she has requested Jude delivers to some beneficiaries of her money - a halfway house run by nuns. 

So, the nuns. They have set up a Magdalene house to help young women who have been sex workers and must complete some rehabilitation in order to avoid prison. The main nuns are Elizabeth and Bernadette. The house is in a bit of a rough neighbourhood but it is an old hotel and has been done up. Jude doesn't know Trudy so she's absolutely baffled as to why she needs to be the one working on this case, but she goes to meet the nuns and the women anyway. She finds herself getting caught up in their lives and the life of the home, despite herself.

Because, you see, Jude grew up as a Catholic. She was raped by the family priest when she was fourteen, and fell pregnant. She was sent to Texas to give birth, and was forced to give her daughter up for adoption. She thinks about her daughter often. Her family basically disowned her and she hasn't been home since. She has closed herself up to friends and socialising, and to the Church entirely. She has been dating a man called Rick, who she has broken up with, but he is refusing to let go of her and is causing her some problems. 

A lot happens in the book. Some of it I was expecting, and some I wasn't. I did think parts of it were a bit predictable. But I liked Jude a lot and wanted her to be okay. I would read something else starring her for sure. I also thought that the end went on a bit long - I think I would have cut it maybe two or three chapters before it actually ended. There are also a lot of characters and threads to keep track of. I also thought that Drew flip flopped a lot and I wanted him to be more consistent. I did like the new love interest! 

In all I'm giving this four out of five, I did like it and I'm gladI  read it. 

Trigger by C G Moore - Review

Saturday, May 24, 2025



Trigger warning for this book! It's about rape! Specificially male rape. It is a little graphic. 

I bought this book in a children's and YA bookshop in Retford at Easter. I was visiting the area with friends and read about this bookshop, so a few of us went along. I bought three books because I had a voucher, and this was one of them. I picked it up in mid May when I was feeling a bit down, and it turned out to be just what I needed. Sometimes books happen like that and I always love it when they do.

So, this is a book told in verse, like Sarah Crossan's books, which I didn't know when I picked it up actually, but it really didn't matter in the grand scheme of things. I think some of the poems worked better than others, and I would have liked a little bit more depth on some. But they did generally work really well. 

The story is about Jay. He wakes up in a park one morning, beaten, bruised, and bloodied. His phone is smashed. He realises he has been sexually assaulted. He goes to his friend Lau, and Lau takes him to the hospital where they take samples and all of that. Jay later realises he was raped, but what exactly happened is a mystery. He remembers being in a club with his boyfriend Jackson, but nothing else. 

Jackson won't speak to him, doesn't come over or any of that. He messages to say he needs some space. Jay has supportive parents, and Lau, and he later goes to a support group where he meets someone called Rain. He goes back to school, but there, everyone knows about the rape, which is awful. 

There's a lot in this about how survivors of rape and sexual assault rarely get justice through the legal system - rapists are rarely prosecuted and even when they are, they are rarely found guilty. That is all true and it adds to Jay's trauma and feelings of shame and worthlessness. 

Jay realises that Jackson may have been involved in what happened to him, which is another massive betrayal. 

It's a sad book but I loved Jay and his character, his spirit. I am giving this four out of five. 

Fire on the Fells by Cath Staincliffe - Review

Wednesday, May 21, 2025


It's the second book starring Leo Donovan and Shan Young! I read and reviewed the first one back in October last year, and when I saw the second in the series I had to request it immediately on Netgalley. Thank you very much to Joffe Books for granting me access to it. I was provided with an electronic copy of this book for review purposes but was not otherwise compensated for this post. All thoughts and opinions are my own. This book is now out. 

The book starts not too long after the close of the first one. Leo's son, Luke, is awaiting sentencing for his part in a series of racist crimes, which Leo found out about and was instrumental in Luke getting caught. Luke is sentenced to twelve months in prison and Luke and Ange feel awful. 

Shan had a miscarriage in the last book and since then her relationship with her girlfriend Erin have turned difficult. Shan doesn't want to talk about it so she's pushing Erin away. Things end up going really south between them which I felt was handled well throughout the book. 

Anyway, a young man is found murdered up on the moors. He is mixed race, and only about eighteen. He has been shot with a shotgun and has a distinctive tattoo. Ange knows him - his name is Tyler and he has been working on some eco protest things with her up on the moors. He is from Lancaster, and his parents are devastated by his death. Some suspicion falls on his ex girlfriend, who has gone a bit AWOL, but Leo and Shan are mostly concentrating on the nearby estate. It runs grouse shooting on the moors, with rich people paying a ridiculous amount to stay at the house and join in. There are several guests, one of whom was seen leaving the area near the time of the murder. There are several members of staff, many of whom live on site, and who have messy interpersonal lives. Leo and Shan have to try to unpack everything and find who has shot Tyler. 

I loved the climax of the book, where there is in fact a fire, when everything just seems awful. This is a really good detective book, with plenty of twists and turns, but the knowledge that Leo and Shan will sort everything out in the end. I'm giving it four out of five. 

The Other Girl by Emily Barr - Review

Sunday, May 18, 2025


As you may know, I have read a lot of Emily Barr's books previously and have enjoyed them all, so when I saw this on Netgalley I had to request it. Thank you so much to Penguin Random House Uk Children's for granting me access to this book. I was provided with an electronic copy of the book for review purposes, but was not otherwise compensated for this post. All thoughts and opinions are my own. 

I can see that Penguin have categorised this as Young Adult, and while I don't disagree, I do think it's got a wider appeal too. I think a lot of adult fans of thrillers would like this too, so don't necessarily discount it just because you don't like Young Adult in particular. 

The beginning of the book sees Tabitha, aged seventeen, on a train across Europe. She is travelling to Switzerland to spend six weeks in an exclusive rehab clinic. She has been partying wildly, drinking and taking drugs, and then she has done something which cost someone his life. Her absent father has managed to keep her out of prison by paying for her to go to this rehab centre. She has cut all ties with her mother, and she no longer speaks to her older sister, Leonora, and her dad has been absent since she was three, so she really hasn't got many friends left. A woman called Jana has been paid to escort her to the rehab. Tabbi is determined to find a way out. 

Then Ruby arrives on the train. She's innocent, a bit ditzy, aged sixteen. She has run away from 'home' - her parents are absent, her grandparents are dead, and she's run away from her aunt and uncle's house. She tells Tabbi she is going to the mountains in Switzerland. Tabbi thinks she is being very clever by persuading Ruby to spend six weeks at a luxury spa, while she can go free on Ruby's Interrail pass. The two girls swap clothes in the toilets, make themselves look a bit more like each other, and split up in Zurich. They plan to meet under the clock at the station six weeks hence. 

Ruby tells Tabbi to not use her name, but Tabbi ignores this, which ends up being her downfall. She quickly runs out of money and gets a job in Cannes as a waitress. She does some soul searching and I would say Tabbi comes out of the book as a better person, by far. Ruby has less to make up for, in my opinion, but I liked how she grew throughout the book. 

The first part is all Tabbi's point of view. The second part is Ruby's. I wasn't sure what would happen after that, and I really did not know how I thought the book would end. I think Emily Barr is brilliant at crafting good plots; her brain works marvellously and I'm always left thinking 'wow'. I loved the ending of the book and cannot complain at all. I'm giving this five out of five because it's just so good. Compelling and interesting. Can't wait for her next one! 

The Party by Elizabeth Day - Review

Thursday, May 15, 2025


I picked this book up in a charity shop not that long ago. I haven't read anything by Elizabeth Day before but I have the book Magpie by her as well, which I will have to read soonish. I was intrigued by this so bought it for a couple of quid. 

I had seen this book sort of touted as a cross between The Talented Mr Ripley and Brideshead Revisited, which I would completely agree with, but I also think it's got a touch of Saltburn in it too. I also read a couple of more negative reviews on Goodreads left by people I know or follow, and I have to say I didn't disagree with them. One of them said she was kind of sick of this kind of narrative, which I do get. However I don't think I've read too much of this type of story - and I loved Saltburn - so it worked for me. But some critcisms were valid. 

There are kind of three strands to the book, which are all about the same people and which are all concentrated on the events of one particular night. In one strand, Martin Gilmour is being interviewed at the police station about the events of the night of his friend Ben's fortieth birthday, some weeks previous. He is interviewed by a woman with beige hair and a man in a grey suit. He is determined to not give them anything, but of course, he has underestimated what exactly they know and he has to work out how much to tell them. 

In the second strand, there is his wife Lucy's notebook. She is in therapy with a man called Keith, and we get to see her side of their marriage. Martin is not really in love with her, and is cold towards her. There are a lot of hints that he is actually gay. And in love with Ben. She is somewhat downtrodden by life and by him. She seems to think she doesn't deserve anything better, in a way. Something happened at Ben's birthday but Lucy's part in it doesn't get revealed until late on in the book, which I actually think worked very well. I liked Lucy but she is used as the only person with any morals in the entire book, which is kind of annoying. 

The third strand of the book is Martin's retelling of his entire life. He was born in to a lower middle class family and his dad died just before he was born, leaving him to be brought up by his cold, distant mother, Sylvia. He is very clever, but doesn't fit in at school. Eventually he gets a scholarship to Burtonbury, a public school in Derbyshire (I think). He arrives, and he obviously doesn't fit in, because he's not posh enough, and he doesn't speak like they do, and he doesn't understand how to act like them. He doesn't make friends, but he meets Ben, a popular and good looking lad. He becomes obsessed with him and plots how to become his friend. After that, the other boys sort of tolerate Martin, although they still don't actually like him. Martin describes Ben as his "best friend".

For Ben's birthday, Martin and Lucy head to Ben and his wife Serena's new massive mansion house, a former priory. They are a bit put out to have not been invited to stay at the house, and are instead stuck in the local Premier Inn or whatever. They head over early. Ben is his usual, cheerful, charming self. He shows them round the new house and he says he wants to speak to Martin about a business deal later. Serena is her usual self too - she's beautiful, but cold, and she clearly thinks Martin and Lucy are beneath her. The couple have four children. Martin and Lucy have no children which Martin is glad about but Lucy is sad about. Lucy can't stand Serena so she is determined to just get drunk at the party.

The party happens. The Prime Minister (meant to be David Cameron, I'm sure) turns up. Martin's old bully, somebody Jarvis, turns up too. He went to Cambridge alongside Ben and Martin, and there are so many secrets coming out. 

There were a few things that I thought were anachronistic, given that Martin and Ben were supposed to be in school in the early 90s and then at university just after that. I also thought that it was maybe a tad predictable in terms of the story. All the characters are unlikeable but I don't think that's necessarily a reason to not like the book? I don't have to like people to find the stories compelling. It wasn't perfect but I did enjoy reading it. I'm giving it four out of five. 

The Penthouse by Catherine Cooper - Review

Monday, May 12, 2025


I saw this book on Netgalley and requested it, so thank you very much to Harper Collins for granting me access to it. I was provided with an electronic copy of this book for review purposes, but was not otherwise compensated for this post. All thoughts and opinions are my own. 

I did quite like this book and found it compelling, and read it very quickly, but I'm not sure it was really deep enough for me. There wasn't enough character development and there are a lot of characters to keep track of which got confusing. I'm not sure the pay off was worth it. 

The novel has a dual narrative concerning five pop stars, spread across two bands. There is Breathe, a girl gorup, comprising Enola, Angel, and Sophie. And This Way Up, made up of Max and Liam. Breathe were put together on an X Factor type show, and weren't friends before hand. And barely were after, to be honest. In the earlier time in the book, it is 2008 and Enola is riding high. She's the lead singer, she's famous, and she's going out with Max. She has bought herself a gorgeous penthouse by the river in London. Her mum, pushy Kimberley, always wanted Enola to be famous. Enola has a twin, too, Roxie, but she's much more introverted and barely features. Max is a problem - he's really jealous of any man that Enola comes into contact with and is really quite abusive towards her. 

After winning an award and having a big party, Enola disappears. Her passport and phone disappear and she is never seen again. Sophie goes quiet, no longer famous. She starts a yoga wellness retreat in Ibiza. Angel has a short solo career but eventually loses her fame and fortune too.

So fifteen years later, both bands get back together to play a couple of gigs in Vegas. They will have an empty microphone on stage in tribute to Enola. Each of the four of them have their own issues and own needs and wants for the gigs. But they are beset by bad luck almost straight away. There are a few people who wish them harm - so who's the guilty party?

As I said, I just didn't think the characters were developed long enough. I did like the conspiracy parts because I really think they showed how insane fan culture can be, but I didn't think the pay off was quite worth it. Still, I would read something else by the same author. I am giving this a three and a half out of five. 

Stay Buried by Kate Webb - Review

Friday, May 9, 2025

I had seen a few people read this book and I was intrigued by it, so when I had a book voucher I got it and picked it up not too long later. I really enjoyed it and have got two more in the same series on Kindle as they were cheap. I'm looking forward to them! 

This is another cold case book, like the Karen Pirie books, and it turns out I really like that kind of detective fiction, so if it works for me, then that's fine. I have struggled with books a bit recently so have been trying to read anything that is easy to read and keeps me enraptured, which this one definitely did. I am going to pass it on to my mum because I think she will like it too. 

The main detective is Matt Lockyer. He has been moved to a cold case crime review unit within Wiltshire police because of mistakes made on a previous case which included his best friend, Kevin. He is a bit of a pariah in the station because of this, but he affects like he doesn't really care. He has a constable working with him, Gemma Broad. She is youngish and enthusiastic and they get on well together. Matt grew up on a farm where his parents still live. He lost his brother when he was young, and it continues to have a massive effect on Matt and his parents. 

Matt gets a phone call from a woman called Hedy Lambert, who has served fourteen years in prison for murder. She wants to tell him that Harry Ferris has returned. This opens up her case again, and Matt obviously goes looking into it. He and Hedy had a bit of a thing, a connection between the two of them. When she was arrested, she refused to speak to anyone except him. He kind of believed she was innocent, but all the evidence pointed to her, and she went down. But maybe he was right back then, and maybe he can now make amends. 

So what happened was this: Professor Roland Ferris owned a huge house which he lived in with his wife and son. She took her own life when Harry was a teenager, and he left the home not too long after, saying he would never speak to his father again. He then reappeared aged about thirty. At that time, Hedy was working as the housekeeper in Roland's house. "Harry" slept in the barn, and was found dead there one morning. By Hedy, who then ended up covered in his blood. The knife that was used was one that Hedy used often, and it had been left on the drainer overnight. The only fingerprints found on it were hers. But it turned out the man in question wasn't Harry. He was a Traveller by the name of Mickey Brown. But now the real Harry HAS come back, and it turns out he wasn't that far away all along. His cousin knew where he was, and his aunt, Roland's sister, never thought Mickey was him. Roland is now dying so Matt is racing against the clock really to go back to the beginning - who wanted Harry dead? Who might have wanted Mickey dead? Who was in or had access to the house that night? And so on.

It's a twisty turny story with lots of red herrings and dead ends. I did work out who had done it before the end but that actually made me enjoy it more because I wanted to see how Matt and Gem got there. It's a really good book and I'm glad I got it. I'm giving it five out of five. 

Good Trouble by Forest Issac Jones - Spotlight and Blog Tour

Tuesday, May 6, 2025



Hello and welcome to my stop on the tour for Good Trouble by Forest Issac Jones. Thank you so much for having me along. Please do click around and look at some of my other posts. I was so intrigued by the premise of this book but I'm really sad that I ran out of time to read it before this post was due. I do still plan on reading it. The issue of civil rights and civil freedoms is something that I am really interested in, especially the history of Northern Ireland and associated fights. 

My partner and I visited Northern Ireland a couple of years ago and we went to the Museum of Free Derry. It is amazing and I highly recommend it if you're in the area. It is simultaneously one of the most depressing and one of the most uplifting places I've ever been. Depressing because of the sheer scale of human misery inflicted upon the Catholics of Northern Ireland - especially on Bloody Sunday, which features heavily and which was so interesting to learn a lot about - but uplifting because of the power of people. The people who will fight for their rights and who will come together to make a movement. There is mention in the museum of the Black Civil Rights Movement and how there was support on both sides. So this book was really ideal for me and I will most likely read it on holiday. 

Let me show some of my photos of Derry and some of the murals. When we were there we saw a lot of Free Palestine graffiti and Palestinian flags, which was amazing too. All these photos are copyrighted to me and may not be copied or used elsewhere. 











This is the blurb for this book: 

Good Trouble will show the strong connection between the Black Civil Rights Movement in the United States and the Catholic Civil Rights Movement in Northern Ireland – specifically the influence of the Montgomery to Selma march on the 1969 Belfast to Derry march through oral history, based on numerous interviews of events leading up to both marches and afterwards. This is close to the author’s heart as both of his parents marched to integrate lunch counters and movie theatres in Salisbury, North Carolina, in 1963 as college students. His mother was at the 1963 March to Washington where Martin Luther King gave his ‘I Have a Dream’ speech.

Award winning author Julieann Campbell (On Bloody Sunday) wrote the introduction for Good Trouble, looking back at her times growing up in Derry, in the heart of the Catholic Civil Rights Movement. Jones travelled to Dublin, Belfast and Derry to conduct interviews for the book. In all, he did fifteen interviews with people who were involved in the movement in Northern Ireland (including Billy McVeigh – featured in the BAFTA winning documentary, Once Upon A Time In Northern Ireland) and in the United States (including Richard Smiley and Dr. Sheyann Webb-Christburg – both were at Bloody Sunday in Alabama and on the Selma to Montgomery march among others). Jones was also able to talk with Eamonn McCann (he took part in the Belfast to Derry march in 1969; he was the John Lewis of Northern Ireland).

Unlike most books on Northern Ireland, this goes into detail about the connection and the influence between the two movements. Also, most focus on Bloody Sunday and not the pivotal incidents at Burntollet Bridge and the Battle of the Bogside. Building off of unprecedented access and interviews with participants in both movements, Jones crafts a gripping and moving account of these pivotal years for both countries.



The Romantic Tragedies of a Drama King by Harry Trevaldwyn - Review

Saturday, May 3, 2025


I saw this book on Netgalley and had to request it immediately because it seemed really up my street. Thank you very much to Macmillan for granting me access to it. I was provided with an electronic copy of the book for review purposes, but was not otherwise compensated for this post. All thoughts and opinions are my own. 

This book is very much in the vein of Simon James Green which I really liked. It reminded me of Noah Can't Even. I loved it, I loved Patch and found the storyline both funny and sweet. That's my favourite kind of YA fiction. 

So Patch is just going into the sixth form. He is called Patrick but he's trying Patch out now as a cool new thing. He lives with his mum and older sister, Kath, who he bickers with constantly. His best friend is Jean. They are kind of outcasts at school and are in the drama club. Patch is gay and Jean is a firm ally. Patch is determined to get a boyfriend by Prom, at the end of term. 

They go to drama club in preparation for the new play, and two very exciting things happen. Firstly, Tessa comes. She uses to be friends with Patch and Jean, but then she started hanging out with the popular crew and they haven't spoken since. So why is she back?! But more excitingly there are two new boys. Peter and Sam. Peter is American and living with Sam's family for a bit due to some family stuff going on. Patch is entirely certain one of them will be his new boyfriend. 

There are many shenanigans and so on, and it's fun and funny, but there are points of pathos too. I liked the growth that nearly everyone showed in the book. I would have liked a little bit more of Patch's mum and sister, but generally I just can't really complain. I'm giving this four out of five as I just really liked it. 
 

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