Dear Edward - Ann Napolitano - Review for Blog Tour

Dear Edward - Ann Napolitano - Review for Blog Tour



Today I have been invited to post my review of Dear Edward as part of the Blog tour.

Dear Edward is a coming of age with a difference. Imagine if your nearest and dearest were all wiped out in one tragic event – one which you miraculously survived, if this happened when you were just 12 years old how would YOU cope? Unimaginable? Yes, thank God, but the author has managed to put herself in this position and tell the story of survivor Edward and allow us as reader to walk in his shoes. It is done very well too.

In a series of flashbacks to just before the terrible tragic plane crash at the heart of this novel, we come to know Eddie as he was, when he had a loving Mother and Father and his older brother Jordan who was his hero, whilst we join Edward as he now prefers to be known as he emerges alone from injuries and trauma he sustained.

As would be expected the main after effects are deeply psychological and Edward finds it really hard to fit in anywhere and be just a normal boy. His miraculous survival have made him an overnight celebrity and it seems like he is being pulled in hundreds of different directions at one when all he wants to do is keep his head down and grieve.

But redemption comes in a new friendship. I enjoyed seeing the relationship between the girl next door, Shay. Truths emerge about the Aunt and Uncle who take him in and we see the hitherto childless couple adapt to losing their relatives and bringing up a deeply troubled pre-teen boy.

Also I liked hearing snippets of the lives of many who have also lost a loved one in the same incident, although I found it pretty unlikely that just about every single relative who lost a loved on would all independently write to a young boy, these letters form the Dear Edward of the title and actually play a big part in his recovery.

The book is heartwarming yet deeply disturbing and I would advise it may prove a difficult read if you have experienced loss of a loved one or have a teenage boy yourself.

Emotional and uplifting.



The Blurb

A heart-wrenching, life-affirming novel about a 12-year-old boy who is the sole survivor of a deadly plane crash

One summer morning, a flight takes off from New York to Los Angeles. There are 216 passengers aboard: among them a Wall Street millionaire; a young woman taking a pregnancy test in the airplane toilet; a soldier returning from Afghanistan; and two beleaguered parents moving across the country with their adolescent sons. When the plane suddenly crashes in a field in Colorado, the younger of these boys, 12-year-old Edward Adler, is the sole survivor.

Dear Edward recounts the stories of the passengers aboard that flight as it hurtles toward its fateful end, and depicts Edward's life in the crash's aftermath as he tries to make sense of the loss of his family, the strangeness of his sudden fame, and the meaning of his survival. As Edward comes of age against the backdrop of sudden tragedy, he must confront one of life's most profound questions: how do we make the most of the time we are given?’


#TheHome - Sarah Stovell - Blog Tour and Review @OrendaBooks

The Home - Sarah Stovell - Blog Tour and Review 

I am delighted to be part of the Blog Tour for the latest psychological chiller by Sarah Stovell.


I loved this twisty psychological masterpiece brimming with terrible secrets and desperate lies.



My Review

The Home is a compelling story of 3 teenage girls, Hope, Annie and Lara, living in a care home for deeply traumatized youngsters from difficult backgrounds, in the Lake District. They are the forgotten girls, the unwanted girls, the tragic product of families broken beyond repair.

We learn right at the beginning of the storytelling that one of them is dead. Pregnant and Dead - a tragic shame. 

In a series of flashbacks, and sometimes in the dead girls own voice, heard from beyond the grave as if there is something or someone she just can't let go, we learn the terrible tragedies which have befallen them. 

The main two characters the story focusses on are Hope and Annie, they are in an intense and passionate relationship with one another. As all 3 girls stories and tragic backgrounds unfold, it becomes apparent that none is a reliable narrator, and even their well-documented backgrounds of abuse and terror are rather subjective. 

There are some pretty graphic scenes of child abuse and trauma, yet despite the girls obvious fragility and unreliability I grew to like them, they are survivors. But mystery surrounds the murder or possibly suicide and only one girl can reveal exactly what happened in the youngsters tragic final moments, but she’s not telling.

It’s hardly surprising, given their abusive and violent backgrounds that each girl has secrets she wants to keep hidden but maybe one of them is covering up even more than you could possibly imagine.

It is an utterly gripping book, told with style and panache and with the brooding fells of the Lake District as a backdrop it captivated me entirely.

Following the authors remarkable debut – Exquisite which also focuses on flawed relationships and unreliable narrators, this is a slick and tension filled drama/ mystery with a creeping sense of menace and dread throughout and a superb twist in the tail, which I love in a psychological thriller.

I received my review copy of #TheHome by @sarahlovescrime through #Randomthingstours @OrendaBooks 

Want to buy your own copy? try here

The Blurb


When the body of pregnant, fifteen-year-old Hope Lacey
is discovered in a churchyard on Christmas morning, the
community is shocked, but unsurprised. For Hope lived in The
Home, the residence of three young girls, whose violent and
disturbing pasts have seen them cloistered away.

As a police investigation gets underway, the lives of Hope, Lara
and Annie are examined, and the staff who work at the home
are interviewed, leading to shocking and distressing revelations
… and clear evidence that someone is seeking revenge.

A dark and devastating psychological thriller, The Home is also
a heartbreaking and insightful portrayal of the underbelly
of society, where children learn what they live … if they are
allowed to live at all.

The Author


Sarah Stovell


Sarah Stovell was born in 1977 and spent most of her life in the Home
Counties before a season working in a remote North Yorkshire youth
hostel made her realise she was a northerner at heart. She now lives in
Northumberland with her partner and two children and is a lecturer in
Creative Writing at Lincoln University. Her debut psychological thriller,
Exquisite, was called ‘the book of the summer’ by Sunday Times.



Update about me a personal Blog Post.

Update about me, a personal Blog Post.

Unlike my usual posts which are almost always book reviews or book related, this is a brief update on whats going on in my life (and as such, probably nobody will read it, or care)

It's also an apology if I'm not posting reviews as frequently as usual and taking part in fewer blog tours and book promotions. It's because I have somewhat less time and energy for both reading and writing lengthy reviews. So if you follow my blog and enjoy my book recommendations, fear not, I still intend to review every single book I have enjoyed. But there may be fewer books as I now have a little less time to read and they also may be a little shorter, but I hope they will still help you decide if you might like a book and find a few new ones to read.

Like many others I'm one of the Waspi women. I should have retired gracefully when I reached 60 (now 3 years ago) I've worked hard all my life and I was ready to retire, wanted to stop working and had great plans for all the things I'd do as soon as I received the old age pension I've worked for all my life.



But I didn't get any pension, and won't until I'm 66 and the little part time, zero hour contract job a few hours a week I had downshifted to, as my deliberate wind down to retirement and had dipped into my savings to fund, was no longer enough to keep up our decent standard of living. 

I searched depressingly and frustratingly long and hard for 2 years for a better paid, permanant job but nobody wanted to take on a 60 plus female with her attendant ageing aches and pains and an underlying bitterness towards having had the rug kicked out from under my feet.

However... I finally landed on my feet, and found an employer prepared to take a chance on me and train me to take on a new role and new challenges despite my memory being awful and my stamina a joke. I've been in my new role just over a year now and I'm still learning new things every day (or trying to).

I'm working hard as a bathroom designer, working for an amazingly supportive and caring family firm who have all but adopted me into the family business, They have given me a new sense of purpose and fulfillment and I LOVE my new job and my employers.

But I do find it hard. I find it pretty exhausting to be honest and some things have had to go by the wayside (hoovering and ironing to name just 2!!)

So this isn't really a moan, nor is it an excuse but I have been feeling a little guilty that my book blog has had to take somewhat of a backseat and I wanted to explain why.

Beast - Six Stories #4 by Matt Wesolowski.

Beast - Six Stories #4 by Matt Wesolowski

Six stories is a darkly different and daring contemporary thriller series.

Beast is part of the six stories series, published by Orenda Books. (They could almost be called Sick stories as they are all dark and devious and pretty much a very modren take on the gothic horror genre) The previous 3 books are, in order, Six Stories #1, Hydra #2, Changeling #3 and Beast is number 4. 

It can be read as a stand alone book, but to be honest once you've read it and loved it, you're going to be desperate to read the other 3, so you may as well read them in order. If you're new to this authors work, I envy you, because I had to wait patiently after reading each Six stories novel, for him to write another - You're going to be able to binge read all 4 if you choose to - go for it - enjoy!



Six stories is a Podcast series created by online journalist Scott King, who deliberately keeps as low a profile as possible whilst investigating for his popular podcasts, where he takes on a cold crime case from a few years ago. All the stories he chooses link closely to some kind of eerie urban legend and he recreates interest in the crime by interviewing six people who were involved at the time. Thus retelling the story in six different voices - six stories. 

The authors ability to speak in many voices gives a uniqueness to each and every version of the same event, which at first may seem repetitive but, new facts emerge every time. The books are refreshingly and uncompromisingly up to date.

In Beast, Scott King begins to unravel a murder mystery which took place in 2018, during the cold spell we will all remember, which became known as The Beast From the East. In a small rundown seaside town in the North East of England a young, popular vlogger Elizabeth Barton was found murdered in a notorious abandoned building known locally as the Vampire tower. Her frozen stiff body was discovered with her decapitated head on her knee. 3 local youths were convicted of this hideous crime which they continue to insist was merely a prank, which went very very wrong. But they are believed to have been part of a cult. As he begins his investigations it emerges that Elizabeth was taking part in a bizarre online social media craze which went viral, in which participants take part in a series of increasingly weird and dangerous dares.

Its so hard to describe the story without giving too much away. So I'll tell you what I can without making any spoilers.

The Setting.

The Author recreates the stifling, claustrophobic feel of life in a bleak, dying Northern smalltown, which makes Broadchurch seem positively cosmopolitan! Where there is little hope of a good future if you don't have the strong desire to escape or the imagination to carve out a career on-line. Yet there is an ultra contemporary and up to date theme running through the book. Like many run down pit villages in the North East, Ergarth is all boarded up shops, hanging around on street corners and a few staple local businesses around which life, not so much revolves as staggers - in main a former pastie factory, and a nasty, notorious, abbatoir (I will offer a warning here, there is a chapter set in this abbatoir where graphic scenes of animal slaughter made me baulk and skim read this part, If, like me you are sensitive to animal cruelty, you have been warned)

The Characters

As Scott King interviews 6 people and there are many other characters whose voices join in the storyteling, there are quite a lot of folk to get your head around, but he has this wonderful ability to paint his characters with unique voices and who speak in local dialect with all the Ums and Errs, dialect and swearing which make them seem incredibly real.

The Legend

This is where the real story lies, an urban myth which may have grown around fact or have been woven from bored minds with too little to do, there is no doubt that the story of the Ergarth Vampire is chilling and macabre and believed by many. This lends a very spooky and terrifying atmosphere to the whole book and you won't want to read it, whilst alone in the house with a howling wind outside.

I was going to write just a short review and yet I've rambled on and still haven't said half of what the book made me think and feel. So I'll just say - brilliant, go read it and enjoy but don't expect it to be an easy ride. Thought provoking and clever throughout this book deserves to tell its own six stories.

My thanks go to @AnneCater of #RandomThings for proving my review copy via OrendaBooks

The Blurb

Elusive online journalist Scott King examines the chilling case of a young vlogger found frozen to death in the legendary local ‘vampire tower’, in another explosive episode of Six Stories…

In the wake of the 'Beast from the East' cold snap that ravaged the UK in 2018, a grisly discovery was made in a ruin on the Northumbrian coast. Twenty-four-year-old vlogger, Elizabeth Barton, had been barricaded inside what locals refer to as 'The Vampire Tower', where she was later found frozen to death.

Three young men, part of an alleged 'cult', were convicted of this terrible crime, which they described as a 'prank gone wrong'. However, in the small town of Ergarth, questions have been raised about the nature of Elizabeth Barton's death and whether the three convicted youths were even responsible.

Elusive online journalist Scott King speaks to six witnesses – people who knew both the victim and the three killers – to peer beneath the surface of the case. He uncovers whispers of a shocking online craze that held the young of Ergarth in its thrall and drove them to escalate a series of pranks in the name of internet fame. He hears of an abattoir on the edge of town, which held more than simple slaughter behind its walls, the tragic and chilling legend of the ‘Ergarth Vampire'…

Both a compulsive, taut and terrifying thriller, and a bleak and distressing look at modern society's desperation for attention, Beast will unveil a darkness from which you may never return…

The Unforgetting by Rose Black - Book Review and Blog Tour

The Unforgetting by Rose Black - Book Review and Blog Tour


I'm inviting you to join me and my fellow book bloggers on the Blog Tour for the new historical novel #TheUnforgetting by #RoseBlack published by @orionbooks.


I'm rounding up this tour today with my review of this fabulous new book set in Victorian England. Literary, clever and riddled with secrets its an engaging and enjoyable read with a gorgeous cover. Thank you Random Things Tours for inviting me along.


In the mid 19th century, there is little opportunity for a woman to carve out a career in acting, but that is what Lily Bell dreams of, the bright lights and magic of entertaining folk from a stage.

She thinks her dreams have come true when Erasmus Salt offers her the chance to be part of his spectacular stage show. She sets off to join him and his sister Faye, only to discover that she is not to appear live on stage but is to take the part of a ghost, in a daring illusion Erasmus is desperate to perfect. Aided by his manservant the mute and eerie Balthazar, she become part of a show of smoke and mirrors as Erasmus tries to take her identity away from her.

She is part of a bargain and her step father has sold her, body and soul as payment of a debt and has forfeited any free will Lily may have had.

As her parents believe she is dead she throws herself into the work, falls in love with a travelling juggler but Erasmus has another agenda in mind and ulterior motives which his sister Faye cannot fathom and which leave Lily trapped and alone.

As the Unforgetting begins however, secrets gradually reveal themselves from the past wich looms up to play a part in the future and Lily needs to make one terrible decision, will she live to regret it?

Filled with the magic of the Victorian era theatre, Lilys story is captivating and complicated. She meets some wonderful characters, fairground folk (which confused me somewhat - they refer to themselves as Gyptians - a term I believed was coined by Philip Pullmann for his Dark Materials series?) 

Putting this aside, there are some lovely almost Dickensian characters (and some rather dastardly ones). Fabulous locations from Ramsgate to London through various towns in the UK to the Town Moor in Newcastle. I was thrilled to find my own home town of Darlington even plays a small part, though it doesn't come over in a very good light!!

There is a deep vein of mystery and sadness at the core of this book and I am sure it will appeal to readers who enjoyed The Miniaturist, the Essex Serpent and the Silent Companions. Any book which gets a few more people reading and enjoying well researched and imaginative historical fiction such as this serves a grand purpose and this is a super example of the genre.


The Blurb

Power, theatre and ghosts in a Victorian gothic historical, perfect for fans of The Silent CompanionsThe Night Circus and The Familiars.
When Lily Bell is sold by her father to a 'Professor of Ghosts' to settle a bad debt, she thinks she about to hit the London stage as an actress. But little does she know that the professor intends her to be his very own ghost, part of an elaborate illusion for a fascinated audience.

Obsessed with perfection, the professor covers all bases to ensure his illusion is realistic - and when Lily comes across her own obituary in the paper, and then her own headstone in the cemetery, she soon realises that she is trapped, her parents think she is dead - and soon her fate is to become even darker...


About the author
Rose Black has written stories all her life. Her long-standing fascination with the Victorians and 19th century England underlies this novel. An award-winning freelance writer, she's covered health, overseas development and education. Married, with two children, she lives partly in London and at other times by the sea. In her spare time, she enjoys wild swimming and growing food and flowers on her allotment.

Dreamland - Nancy Bilyeau - REVIEW and Blog Tour

Dreamland - Nancy Bilyeau - REVIEW and Blog Tour

I've been itching to post my review for the wonderful historical extravaganza which is Dreamland by Nancy Bilyeau, as I'm longing to shout about how wonderful it is.



My Thanks go to the Publisher Endeavour Press for inviting me along to Dreamland.

My Review

Stunning to look at with the beautiful midnight blue and lavish gold cover and enchanting to read, Dreamland is a feast for the senses in every aspect.



I thoroughly enjoyed my trip to Dreamland, one of Coney Islands massive fairground and fun palaces. Through this book I stepped back in time to 1911 wearing the expensive and stylish shoes of Peggy Batternburg, daughter of one of America’s wealthiest families.

The early part of the 20th century isn’t perhaps the best time to be a young woman who longs to carve a life for herself, and at the beginning of the story she has a job in a bookshop, a touch of independence which she had to battle for and lean on family influence to obtain.

But family ties are all in this famously wealthy clan and Peggy is summoned home to join the family for the summer in the lavish and luxurious hotel The Oriental, only the hint of excitement promised by the nearby entertainments and attractions of Coney Island provide a hint of temptation to compensate for the loss of her independence to the young woman.
Her snobby, wealthy relatives are all about keeping up appearances. The menfolk are in the main a profligate bunch, playboys who view wives as necessary adornments and women as disposable playthings. The women are subservient, biddable, elegant and shallow. Peggy feels she doesn’t fit in, despite her love for her sister and exasperated affection for her younger brother.

Escaping to Dreamland the noisy, colourful funfair casts a spell over Peggy and when she meets a handsome, charming but penniless artist, she falls head over heels in love with the most unsuitable man she could possibly choose.

When a womans body is washed up on the beach, it is shocking but something that has nothing to do with the Batternburgs, but then another turns up and Peggy begins to feel watched, threatened, helpless. 

This lovely book turned out to be a murder mystery Agatha Christie would most likely be pleased to be compared to, coupled with romance and a great atmospheric and unusual location. 

The Author's detailed research and the lovingly recreated historical detail adds to the drama. A smashing story throughout, combining superb characters, loads of drama and a lavish and intriguing setting blend seamlessly to provide an enthralling and captivating read.

Please consider visiting some of my fellow bloggers also on this tour.



The Blurb


The year is 1911 when twenty-year-old heiress Peggy Batternberg is invited to spend the summer in America’s Playground.

The invitation to the luxurious Oriental Hotel a mile from Coney Island is unwelcome. Despite hailing from one of America’s richest families, Peggy would much rather spend the summer working at the Moonrise Bookstore than keeping up appearances with New York City socialites and her snobbish, controlling family.

But soon it transpires that the hedonism of nearby Coney Island affords Peggy the freedom she has been yearning for, and it’s not long before she finds herself in love with a troubled pier-side artist of humble means, whom the Batternberg patriarchs would surely disapprove of.

Disapprove they may, but hidden behind their pomposity lurks a web of deceit, betrayal and deadly secrets. And as bodies begin to mount up amidst the sweltering clamour of Coney Island, it seems the powerful Batternbergs can get away with anything…even murder.

Extravagant, intoxicating and thumping with suspense, bestselling Nancy Bilyeau’s magnificent Dreamland is a story of corruption, class and dangerous obsession.

The Author Nancy Bilyeau




Nancy is a writer and magazine editor who has worked as an editor at "Rolling Stone," "InStyle," and "Good Housekeeping." Her latest historical novel is "Dreamland," set in 1911 New York City and due to be published Jan 16, 2020.

In December 2019 Nancy published a novella set in old New York: "The Ghost of Madison Avenue."

She is the author of "The Blue," a novel of suspense set in the art and porcelain worlds of 18th century Europe featuring a young female artist turned spy, and a trilogy of award-winning Tudor mysteries, published in 9 countries: "The Crown," "The Chalice," and "The Tapestry."

Nancy's mind is usually in past centuries, but she lives with her family in the Queens borough of New York City.

Visit Nancy's website at www.nancybilyeau.com and follow her on Twitter @tudorscribe.







Beyond the Moon by Catherine Taylor my Review

Beyond the Moon by Catherine Taylor my Review


My last book of the year and one of the best! This book was an absolute JOY to read. I must confess I enjoyed it so much more than I'd even hoped to.



I was perhaps a little uncertain at first glance, as (apologies to all concerned) the cover reminds me of Mills and Boon books (which I have never liked) but the minute I received my copy, instead of adding it to my tbr pile as is usual, I opened it just to read a few pages to see if it would interest me and hours later I emerged, breathless and spellbound from the pages, wiping a tear from my eye.

This is one superbly written, time-slip romance to rival (eclipse?) Outlander, and for anyone who enjoys a dual time narrative which is vividly descriptive, completely immersive and painstakingly researched this ticks all the boxes.

In the present day we have Louise, grieving deeply for the recent passing of her grandma, with whom she was brought up. All alone in the world, her chosen medical studies on hold, she hits the bottle and in a drunken fog stumbles over a cliff edge and almost comes to grief. Convinced this was a serious suicide attempt and that she is suffering from deep depression and psychosis, she suddenly finds herself bundled off to a truly awful mental hospital from which she cannot escape.

Coldbrook Hall is a hospital located in a former stately home, now run down, badly managed and in disrepair. Despite making a couple of friendships with fellow patients Louisa is desperate to get out of there and managing to slip unnoticed into another part of the building, cordoned off for imminent demolition, she is surprised when she hears a mans voice calling for help....

Meanwhile 100 years in the past, a wounded army Lieutenant, Robert Lovett, lies in his hospital bed, blind and injured, recuperating from terrible war injuries sustained in the first world war. A talented painter he longs only to be able to see again so he can return to the battle front to aid his fellow men and to know that he will be able to paint again.

It is he who is calling for assistance and Louisa who comes to his aid, despite living a century apart, they are drawn together and so begins a seemingly impossible relationship and a deep and abiding love.

The ensuing story takes us back and forth in time, where the experiences on the battlefield are graphic and mind blowingly terrible. I don't think I've ever read such a well depicted tale of war which so clearly made me see the sheer horror of battle and men being forced to fight for their lives in appalling conditions.

The book is also a real testament to a century of medical treatments and advances, although as we see from Louisa's all too credible helplessness, once caught in "the system" modern advances don't necessarily benefit all patients and this book highlights shortcomings in todays privately run mental hospitals.

This is a magical piece of literature and a completely absorbing escape to captivate any discerning romantic reader and one I wholeheartedly recommend. If you've ever enjoyed books by Rachel Hore, Susanna Kearsley or Kate Morton do give this a try and if you're a fan of Diana Gabaldons Outlander series, this will surely enchant you.

The Blurb

Outlander meets Birdsong in this haunting debut timeslip novel, where a strange twist of fate connects a British soldier fighting in the First World War and a young woman living in modern-day England a century later.

In 1916 1st Lieutenant Robert Lovett is a patient at Coldbrook Hall military hospital in Sussex, England. A gifted artist, he’s been wounded fighting in the Great War. Shell shocked and suffering from hysterical blindness he can no longer see his own face, let alone paint, and life seems increasingly hopeless.

A century later in 2017, medical student Louisa Casson has just lost her beloved grandmother – her only family. Heartbroken, she drowns her sorrows in alcohol on the South Downs cliffs – only to fall accidentally part-way down. Doctors fear she may have attempted suicide, and Louisa finds herself involuntarily admitted to Coldbrook Hall – now a psychiatric hospital, an unfriendly and chaotic place.

Then one day, while secretly exploring the old Victorian hospital’s ruined, abandoned wing, Louisa hears a voice calling for help, and stumbles across a dark, old-fashioned hospital room. Inside, lying on the floor, is a mysterious, sightless young man, who tells her he was hurt at the Battle of the Somme, a WW1 battle a century ago. And that his name is Lieutenant Robert Lovett…

Two people, two battles: one against the invading Germans on the battlefields of 1916 France, the other against a substandard, uncaring mental health facility in modern-day England. Two journeys begun a century apart, but somehow destined to coincide - and become one desperate struggle to be together.

Part WW1 historical fiction, part timeslip love story - and at the same time a meditation on the themes of war, mental illness, identity and art - Beyond The Moon sweeps the reader on an unforgettable journey through time. An intelligent read, perfect for book clubs.

Some quotes about the book

*Shortlisted for the Eharmony/Orion Write Your Own Love Story Prize 2018/19

"The characterization is spot-on, as is the historical time-line. Beyond the Moon is not only a page-turner but an intelligent appraisal of medicine, psychology and mental illness over the years. Historical fantasy at its very best." — Historical Novel Society

"A poignant and stirring love story... Taylor’s accomplished, genre-bending book succeeds as a WW1 historical novel and a beguiling, time travel romance... The sharply written narrative deftly moves back and forth between the past and present."  Kirkus Reviews

"A time travel romance, yet so much more than that. It is also an unflinching portrait of the horrors of war, and a look at the torturous extremes a human soul can endure. It is a sonnet to the transformative power of love, even as it is also a criticism of the futility and pointless destructiveness of war." — Shaylin Gandhi, author of By The Light of Embers

Link to the book on Amazon uk