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| St Martin's Press October 2013
The idea that an anointed King of
England could have lain undisturbed for the last 500 years under the concrete
of a Leicestershire car park caused a flurry of excitement. Along with the rest
of the world, I waited in hopeful anticipation that the achingly vulnerable skeletal
remains would indeed prove to be those of Richard III, the last of the Plantagenet
kings and the last king of England to be killed in battle.
In The King’s Grave, both authors
give their view on the results of the archaeological dig, which took place in
the summer of 2012. From Michael Jones, we are given the historical background into
the life and times of Richard III, putting into context, not just Richard’s fight
for the crown, but also shedding light on the complicated politics which followed
the premature death of Edward IV, in 1483. Philippa Langley’s epic contribution
demonstrates her absolute conviction that Richard lay beneath the letter “R” in
the social services car park, and demonstrates her dogged determination in
getting this project, which was so dear to her heart, from the planning stages
to its ultimate conclusion.
The book is exceptionally user
friendly. It enthrals like a well written historical novel, with at its centre
the almost unbelievable story that a King of England could have been left alone
and vulnerable for so long. As we know, the events which unfolded as Richard’s
remains were uncovered are far from fiction, and only the absolute conviction
from those enthusiasts who gave so willingly of their time, money and energy, meant
that this project ever saw the light of day.
I stayed up long and late to
finish this book, interspersing my time, with watching clips of the dig, which
can be easily found on YouTube. I found the whole project fascinating to
behold, not just the professionalism of those who had the difficult task of
extracting Richard’s skeleton but also in the sheer skill of those experts who
gave so willingly of their time to prove beyond reasonable doubt that Richard,
the last Plantagenet King of England, had indeed been found.
My thanks to NetGalley and St
Martin’s Press for my ecopy of this book.
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There's a little bit of book love going on as the cat crept in and curled at my side, read with me, read with me, softly he sighed ....
Thursday, 31 October 2013
Review ~ The King's Grave by Philippa Langley and Michael Jones
Wednesday, 30 October 2013
Review ~ Working Lives by David Hall
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| Bantam Press 2012 |
I was born into a working class
family in the industrial North of England, so the stark picture of the three coal
miners who gaze enigmatically out from the front cover of Working Lives, is a
scene which is entirely familiar to me. As a child, I watched as my coal miner father
washed off the worst of the coal dust in a bucket of water in the backyard, and
I grew up with tall tales of shot firing, coal seams and underground
explosions.
David Hall’s interesting and
informative social history explores the lives of the working classes in post-war
Britain. The inherent danger of the northern coal fields and the noise and dust
of the Lancashire cotton weaving sheds formed a landscape which was difficult to
escape. And, likewise, the vivid descriptions of the frenetic activity of the North Eastern
ship builder, through to the heat and bellow of the Yorkshire steel works, gives
the narrative a uniquely individual voice, which neither glorifies this post-war period
as halcyon days, nor does it allow the facts to outweigh personal perspectives.
The anecdotal stories which are interspersed amongst the factual evidence are fascinatingly
poignant and are reminiscent of long lost industrial pride.
The five main chapters are well divided
with some minimal overlapping as one industry is occasionally reliant on another.
These sections explore in great detail the effect that these industries had on the
communities they served, and the structure and political ramifications as
Britain became the most urbanized industrial nation in the world.
As someone who was born well into
this post war industrial period, I am always rather shocked to consider that
this is now seen largely as a historical period, but there is no doubt that we
owe a huge debt of honour to the sagacity of those intrepid workers who
maintained the status quo during this uniquely industrial time in our nation’s
history.
In this post-war examination , David Hall has done them proud.
My thanks to Elizabeth Masters at Transworld Publishers for my copy of this book.
Tuesday, 29 October 2013
Today My Author Spotlight falls on ....Ali Bacon
Ali ~ welcome to Jaffareadstoo and thank you for taking the time to chat about your book
What is it about your book that will pique the reader’s interest?
I think my main character, a feisty eighteen-year-old, and her string of predicaments (why is she a social outcast? why is she eyeing up someone else’s boyfriend?) will sweep the reader along and I think I have achieved a distinctive and consistent voice for her. I think many people have come to it because of it’s setting on the Fife coast – a big holiday area - and of course in Edinburgh, a unique and much-loved city.
How long did it take you to write the first draft of A Kettle of Fish?
Difficult question as I am a very stop-start kind of writer. The idea was born during a holiday in 2007 (yes, that long ago!) when I was still doing final edits to a previous novel. I probably put ‘pen to paper’ in early 2008. I did go off at a good pace and I know I took a first draft to a writer’s conference in June 2009 – for me that’s a very quick write. However, after that I took a longish break (as usually happens with me) during which the plot was restructured and lots more changes made until it was picked up for publishing in spring 2012. For me 5 years seems to be standard.
The book world is very competitive – how do you get your book noticed?
I was determined that my book would look good and grab attention. I did try to choose an interesting title and I asked my publisher if I could employ my own designer (who just happens to be my daughter) for the cover, in the hope of having a product that would stand out. I am very happy with the results, but I have since learned that to some extent it’s better to conform to a recognisable style in matters of presentation, so maybe it has stood out a little too much! From then on it was a case of using all the tools at my disposal to get the first (e-book) edition noticed. I already had a blog and was a confirmed Twitter user so I did have a ‘platform’ from which to sell my wares. But of course so does everyone else! For a year I was a member of an online writers’ cooperative group who worked as a team on marketing and promotion, and that did provide a boost. When I went on to publish the paperback it was more a case of foot-slogging. I’ve done presentations in my local libraries and other community ventures and have recently been part of a joint project with my writing group (http://writersunchained.wordpress.com) which has given all of us more publicity. I have to say public appearances have not come easily, but is all part of the job. I’ve also been involved in workshops and other activities to support new writers which feels more satisfying than straight promotion.
What advice would you give to aspiring writers?
Write. Keep writing. Get help.
I think finding the right help is very important. Having been a ‘closet writer’ I went on a one-day writing course which was a total disaster. I stopped writing for quite a while. A few years later I signed up for a six-week evening course which turned out to be exactly right for me. Or maybe it was just the time that was right. Since then I've been in two different writing groups and in both of them have found ‘critical friends’ whose comments I trust. Accepting criticism is hard especially for a new writer, but we will all have to deal with it sooner or later. The next thing to learn is when to take the criticism on board and when to stick to your guns. It is your writing after all.
Which writers have inspired you?
Writers who speak to me in a direct way have mostly been mainstream women novelists like Rose Tremain, Penelope Lively, Margaret Forster, and more recently Ann Patchett. I suppose they are the people who make me think ‘If only I could write a book like that’ or even ‘maybe I could write a book like that’. Then there are other books that just sweep me away to somewhere wholly unfamiliar and they provide a different kind of inspiration. I’m thinking of the Time Traveller’s Wife, The Handmaid’s Tale or Kate Atkinson's earlier work. My first novel was about a middle aged woman coming to terms with an old love affair but in some obscure way I was kicked into writing it by Rose Tremain’s Restoration - about a courtier to King Charles II.
Can you tell us what you are writing next?
True to form I’m going off in a totally new direction again, this time by writing a historical novel. It came about because I became interested in (obsessed by?) a Victorian photographer who lived in Edinburgh and whose name has somehow kept cropping up in my life. Clearly I would have to write his story! It has taken me a while to do the research and also to get to grips with how much will be history and how much will be fiction. I’ve already made a few false starts but I think I’m pretty much ready to make a go of it now.
Bio
Ali Bacon was born in Dunfermline in Scotland and graduated from St Andrews University. Her writing has been published in Scribble, The Yellow Room and a number of online magazines. She was shortlisted for the A&C Black First Novel Competition 2006. She now lives near Bristol. A Kettle of Fish is her first published novel.
Website and blog: http://alibacon.com
Twitter @AliBacon

A Kettle of Fish is a rollercoaster family drama set in Scotland and published by Thornberry Publishing
Buy it from Amazon UK (£1.99) or Amazon USA in Kindle format.
Print edition: ISBN 9781781768624
Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/AKettleOfFish
Ali ~ thank you so much for spending time on our blog. Jaffa and I wish you continued success with your writing career. Come back and see us soon.
Ali is very kindly offering a Kindle copy of her book to one lucky winner of this giveaway
a Rafflecopter giveaway
***
Ailsa has just finished school and faces the agonising dilemma of either moving away to Edinburgh and university life, or remaining at home in Fife, with her increasingly demanding mother. Both choices brings its own set of problems, but when Ailsa is overtaken by raging hormones, and meets and falls, sort of in lust with, one of the local boys, suddenly her life starts to get even more complicated.
What I loved about this coming of
age story was just how realistic it was in terms of Ailsa’s thoughts and
feelings, and how the sheer draining energy of Ailsa’s mum, Lorraine was
conveyed in heartbreaking detail. Time and place is captured perfectly, as is
the indecision of those late teenage years, when although the world beckons, we
are somehow reluctant to leave behind the safety of childhood. Drifting from
one bad relationship to another, Ailsa is not just learning about her own sexuality, but is also hampered by childhood memories, and the revelation of a well kept
and sordid family secret means that Ailsa needs to confront the past, before
she can move on into her future.
Quite effortlessly, the author
has captured not just the indecision of youth but also the sense of drifting
along aimlessly with no real purpose until galvanised into action. She has
combined this with a love of Scotland, from the urban environment of cultural
Edinburgh, with its cafes, galleries and bars; through to the beauty of Scotland’s
stunning coastline, all merge into really thoughtful and well written story.
Monday, 28 October 2013
Review ~ If You Could See What I See by Cathy Lamb
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| Kensington Books |
After years spent as a
documentary film maker, Meggie O’Rourke has returned to help manage her family’s
lingerie business in Portland, Oregon. Lace, Satin and Baubles is the creation
of Meggie’s grandmother, a feisty Irish immigrant who controls Meggie and her
sisters with a rod of iron. The bonds of family run deep and the O’Rourkes care passionately for both their exquisitely pretty lingerie and their diverse work force who
create their delicate masterpieces. However, aware that the business needs a
real jolt of excitement to boost sales, Meggie and her sisters have limited
time to come up with a dynamic new vision. In order to entice more customers,
Meggie decides to interview her relatives and employees about their first bra
and special lingerie, and whilst she imagines something frivolous, what she
actually gets is poignant, sweet and achingly emotional.
The story draws you in from the
beginning. The gentle exploration of family dynamics is cleverly achieved and Meggie
and her sisters, whilst proportionately dysfunctional have warmth and spirit,
which makes for compelling reading. And yet, the real essence of the novel
comes with the gradual revelation of Meggie’s past, in which something dark and
dirty lingers like a bad smell, and which is revealed little by little in vivid
detail.
As with all Cathy Lamb novels
there is a real sense that she understands both her target audience, and the fundamental
knowledge of what makes women tick. She writes so well, that in the space of
just a few short paragraphs you find that you can laugh, cry and shout out loud, and still be completely bowled over by the way her characters are just so exactly
right.
Overall, this is a story about
family, and the truths we withhold from ourselves and others, and the courage
we all need to find when faced with our own demons.
Sunday, 27 October 2013
Review ~ Others of My Kind by James Sallis
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Published
by
No Exit Press
27 October 2013
|
The author is clearly a master of
the succinct; no words are wasted and each sentence is constructed with such
precision that even the most provocative of scenarios, and there are a couple
of events in the book which I found difficult to read, are recorded in such an
unemotional sort of way, that almost without realising it, a bond forms between
reader and protagonist, which lasts until the story is finished.
In any other author’s hands, this
story would probably have run on for several hundred pages, but without doubt,
James Sallis has said everything that needed be said in just 157 pages of sheer
brilliance.
My thanks to Real Readers for my
copy of this book to read in advance of its publication.
About the author
James Sallis (born 21 December
1944 in Helena, Arkansas) is an American crime writer, poet and
musician, best known for his series of novels featuring the character
Lew Griffin and set in New Orleans, and for his 2005 novel Drive, which was adapted into a 2011 film of the same name.
Saturday, 26 October 2013
Review - Cry of the Children by J M Gregson
A Lambert and Hook mystery....
The disappearance of a child
strikes fear into the very heart any police force and Chief Superintendent
Lambert and his team of officers have very few clues to follow when seven year
old, Lucy Gibson goes missing after spending an evening at a local fairground.
What then follows is a fairly straightforward police procedural crime story
which has the added advantage of being part of a series and which will no doubt
appeal to the author’s legions of fans who follow the Lambert and Hook style of
crime resolution.
In many ways this is a rather
gentle story, which sits oddly alongside the story of child abduction, and yet,
for me, what sets this story apart, is in the finely observed character detail
and in the calm attention to the minutiae of daily life. Beautifully written, the
story carries the reader along without ever needing to resort to sensationalistic
tactics. Sure, there is more than enough gusto in the story, but the blood and
gore is firmly left at the crime scene, and sometimes I enjoy that more than
standing in a mortuary with the pathologist as they poke around in someone’s
insides.
The severity of the crime being
investigated and the outcome of the enquiry into child abduction is resolved by
the end of the book, and whilst there are no great surprises in the outcome,
the journey to get there is a very enjoyable reading experience.
Expected publication January 2014
My thanks to NetGalley and Severn
House for my advance e-copy of this book.
Friday, 25 October 2013
Book Beginnings on Fridays....
Hosted by Gilion at Rose City Reader
Book Beginnings on Fridays as stated by the host was started:
"to share the first sentence (or so) of the book you are reading, along with your initial thoughts about the sentence, impressions of the book, or anything else the opener inspires."
You can share on Google + and social media , please post using the hash tag #BookBeginnings and there's also a Mr Linky on the host's blog.
Book Beginnings : If You Could See What I See by Cathy Lamb
Published July 2013
Kensington
Book Blurb from Goodreads.
For decades, the women
in Meggie O’Rourke’s family have run Lace, Satin, and Baubles, a
lingerie business that specializes in creations as exquisitely pretty as
they are practical. The dynamic in Meggie’s family, however, is
perpetually dysfunctional. In fact, if Meggie weren’t being summoned
back to Portland, Oregon, by her grandmother, she’d be inclined to stay
away all together.
***
Black.
That’s what he was wearing when it happened.
That’s what he was wearing when it happened.
I never wear black anymore.
He ended up wearing red, too.
That’s what killed my soul.
The red.
He haunts me. He stalks me.
For over a year I have tried to outrun him.
It hasn’t worked.
My name is Meggie.
I live in a tree house.
The premise of the story doesn't seem to live up to the opening of this book, but as with all Cathy Lamb stories there is usually more going on.....Meggie is a mystery, I'm looking forward to finding out why she is so haunted by this image..........
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