Showing posts with label Ebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ebook. Show all posts

Thursday, 9 August 2018

Blog Tour ~ Puzzle Girl by Rachael Featherstone



Jaffareadstoo is delighted to be hosting today's stop on the Puzzle Girl Blog Tour


Puzzle Girl will be published by the Dome Press in ebook on 2nd August 2018 and in paperback in January 2019.

My thanks to the publishers for the invitation to the blog tour and for my ecopy of the book.

Huge thanks also to Rachael for answering my questions about Puzzle Girl


Hi Rachael, welcome to Jaffareadstoo. Tell us a little about yourself. 

I am a very happy and proud new mummy, and recently turned 30. I love period dramas and Disney films (which I now have an excuse to re-watch with my daughter!). I enjoy reading romance novels, psychological thrillers and am taking a crash course in the wonderfully colourful world of baby board books. I am currently adapting to reading novels on my iPhone Kindle app in the rare me-moments I have when my daughter is napping – it’s amazing how a great book can still provide pure escapism on a tiny screen, even when you’re sitting in yesterday’s tee-shirt with baby-food smeared on the sleeve. 

How long have you been writing and what got you started? 

I started writing back in 2012 after my mum was diagnosed with terminal ovarian cancer. Seeing how bravely she fought her cancer, by living her life to the full, going travelling, making new friends and fundraising, inspired me to make my dream of becoming an author a reality. 

What inspired you to write Puzzle Girl and what can you tell us about it that won’t give too much away? 

One afternoon sat in a hospital waiting room with my mum, I stared at the pile of magazines left for patients to read. I found myself wondering, if I wrote a note in one of them, would anyone ever find it? In my novel, Puzzle Girl, Cassy does just that. After a disastrous turn of events, Cassy scribbles a note in a magazine while sat in a doctor’s surgery and when she returns for a check-up she finds someone has replied. She becomes obsessed with finding out who this mystery person is, but her mission might just cost her everything she holds dear, and then some. 

Are you a plotter... or... a start writing and see where it takes you sort of writer? 

Plotter, plotter, plotter. I am a plotter-nutter. I have post-it note timelines, Excel story arc graphs, countless notebooks full of plans with crazy flow diagrams. It all culminates in a Word document plot outline that is longer than most short stories. In fact, my outline, often turns into the novella that forms the backbone of my first draft. 

What were the challenges you faced whilst writing Puzzle Girl? 

Well, there were many… but one that had me stumped for quite a while was the dynamic between Cassy and the mystery Puzzle-man. In a fair number of romantic novels, you know pretty early on who the love interest is, but in Puzzle Girl, Cassy has nothing to go on other than a short message in a magazine. It was this dynamic that drove me - and challenged me - to write Puzzle Girl. 

When do you find the time to write, and do you have a favourite place to do your writing? 

Well… Before my daughter was born, I had it all figured out. I’d start writing around 9am at my dining room table, looking out at my lovely garden. Now my garden is rather wild and my dining room chair has been replaced with a highchair. I write in the evenings in bed, with the baby monitor by my side, so on those nights when I feel too tired to keep going, I can look at my little buddle of joy and remember it’s all worth it. 

Can you tell us if you have another novel planned? 

I do! My agent and I have been working together to fine-tune my second novella-style plot outline and I’m knee-deep in editing my first draft. I won’t give too much away at this stage but I will say that it’s another romantic comedy and – driven by my love of period dramas – set in an English country manor house. Watch this space!


I'm delighted to be able to share my review of Puzzle Girl..

When the world gets too tough for Cassy Brooks she takes refuge in doing puzzles so when she meets with an accident on her way to an important meeting at work, she passes the time in the NHS walk in clinic by doing a 'make up your own' puzzle she finds in a magazine. When she returns later to the clinic she finds that someone has been leaving messages within the puzzle. 

What then follows is a light-hearted and entertaining read about Cassy's search for the mystery puzzle person which not only means that she has to keep returning to the clinic under a number of excuses but also that this distraction starts to impact on her, already busy, time at work.

Puzzle Girl has all the hallmarks of a lighthearted summer read. It's really easy to get immersed in the convoluted chaos that is Cassy's life, and as we experience with her all the problems she has,first with a relationship break-up, and then with an over ambitious colleague at work, so we get to know, and understand, just what makes her act in the slightly loopy way that she does.

I really enjoyed reading Puzzle Girl. It's warm and funny, witty and slightly daft in places however,  throughout the whole of the story I had a smile on my face and was thoroughly entertained from start to finish.





Rachael Featherstone was born and raised in Woodford. Her path to writing was a little unorthodox. After reading Mathematics at Oxford University, New College, Rachael went to work in research. When Rachael’s mother was diagnosed with terminal cancer in 2012, Rachael decided to take a chance, quit her job, and fulfill a lifetime ambition to write a novel. She went back to university and completed a Masters in English Literature and had several short stories published. Rachael now lives in Hampshire with her husband and daughter.


Twitter: @WRITERachael #PuzzleGirl

Instagram : @rachael_featherstone

Facebook : @RachaelFeatherstoneAuthor

@DomePress





Thursday, 26 October 2017

Review ~ Christmas at the Falling Down Guest House by Lilly Bartlett


Michele Gorman writing as Lilly Bartlett


Publisher : Notting Hill Press
25 October 2017


My thanks to the author and publisher for my e-copy of this book


Blurb...

Too bad the same can’t be said for single mother and extremely undomestic goddess, Lottie. When her beloved Aunt Kate ends up in hospital just before Christmas, Lottie and her seven-year-old daughter rush to rural Wales to take over her B&B. A picky hotel reviewer and his mad family are coming to stay, and without the rating only he can give them, Aunt Kate will lose her livelihood. 

But Lottie can barely run her own life, let alone a hotel. How will she manage to turn the falling-down guesthouse into the luxurious wonderland the reviewer expects? And could the mysterious taxi driver, Danny, who agrees to help her, turn out to be the real gift this season?

As the snow sparkles on the trees and hot chocolate steams in your hand, snuggle into the delicious magic of Christmas at the Falling-Down Guesthouse.


My thoughts...

A ramshackle guest house in rural Wales is the setting for this delightful Christmas read. 

Following a devastating accident to her aunt Kate, Lottie and her seven year old daughter Mabel, arrive in Wales, ostensibly to take over running their aunt’s guest house, however, they are dismayed to find that the guest house, far from being a rural retreat, turns out to be something from a hammer horror film. The faded elegance and shabby chic of this rural idyll and the way in which Lottie enlists the help of local taxi driver Danny to help her turn the business around, forms the basis of the story.

From the beginning, I loved the story, the setting, and the characters, who made me, laugh out loud. It has a wonderful light hearted charm and whilst it’s a quick read, I read it in one sitting over the course of a rainy afternoon; it really helped to lighten my mood and provided great escapism.





So, if you want something to cheer you up on a cold wintery day – put the kettle on, grab a cup of tea, and a packet of chocolate hob nobs, and immerse yourself in Christmas at The Falling Down Guest House.

Just to add that this is a novella and was originally published as The Reluctant Elf by Michele Gorman.





Find on Twitter @MicheleGormanUK







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Friday, 27 May 2016

Monkfish Maggie and the Bungalow Stairs....


**Out Today **



Monkfish Maggie and the Bungalow Stairs





Ilustrated by Berg Norcross








When Maggie returns home from the market one spectacularly normal day, two things in particular strike her as strange.
found…

• Firstly, a rather peculiar set of stairs have sprouted from her otherwise stairless bungalow.
• Secondly, and probably most concerning of all, her husband Nesbitt is nowhere to be found…

Where is Nesbitt? Why have these extraordinary stairs appeared - and more importantly, what lies beyond them? Evil? Good? Monsters? Head lice?!

Join Maggie as she searches low, high and even higher for Nesbitt, in an intriguing debut adventure that will captivate children and adults alike.

Love stairs? This story is for you!
Hate stairs? It’s for you as well!
Don’t care either way? Me neither - have yourself a read!




Amazon .co .uk



Written by CatchphraseDan and bursting with over 50 enchanting illustrations by the mystical Berg Norcross, Monkfish Maggie and the Bungalow Stairs will dunk you deep into a barrel of mystery and then wring you dry like a limp blue flannel. Sit yourself down and open your mind hole, because this story is coming at you…

…Now!




CatchphraseDan





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Saturday, 24 January 2015

Review ~ Vivian's Couch by Michael Obiora

23664475
Open Box Production
2014


Kieran Ledley is the world’s most expensive football player, he is also one half of glamour couple “Kier-rissa,” and his step-brother is about to be released from prison.

Freddie Abani is the MP for Woundham, who was touted as London’s potential first black Mayor - until the summer riots.

Rupal Advani is a former policewoman and is now a marijuana addict.

Gemma and her struggling filmmaker husband Pete Newman, are trying to save their marriage.

Vivian Moses is a therapist, and they all have her in common.




This book is not something I would normally have picked up but when approached by the author to read and review it, I was taken in, firstly by the simplicity of the cover, which is, I think, quite striking, but also, because, the overall premise of the story intrigued me.

We read so much about the people who relish being in the spotlight, and watching snippets of the recent celebrity big brother, only reiterates just how vulnerable are people when they are, supposedly, just being themselves. In reality they are as angst ridden and perplexed as the rest of us.

In Vivian’s Couch the author succeeds in bringing a gritty realism to the world of the therapist and of the intertwining of lives which have been irrevocably damaged by circumstances. Although it’s a relatively short read, coming in at just over 164 pages, there is a clear understanding of taking the reader on a journey. Once you get used to the author’s distinctive style of writing, which is, at times, quite dark and gritty, the diversity of the characters start to come together and this then gives the book its realistic edginess.

Overall,I think that Vivian's Couch is an interesting and thought provoking read about the vagaries of modern life.





Michael Obiora




Michael Obiora is an actor and writer. His first novel – BLACK SHOES, was published in 2009
 His second novel VIVIAN’S COUCH, a prequel to Black Shoes, was released in December 2014.





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