December 2023 Books #AmReading

2023… I read many, many books, which were wonderful, but I am glad to see the end of you, as a year. It’s not been my best… Goodreads I completed 157 books this year, and that isn’t counting some I proof read or read as an alpha reader! When they send me my update, I’ll be sure to share!

I’m starting the month with no arcs… You know it won’t last. It never does! (Okay, so there were at least 7 by the end of the month that were arcs!)

Small Hours by Bobby Palmer
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Isaac and the Egg was a brilliant read, making me eager to get into this second novel by Bobby Palmer.
Jack is a man who thinks he’s got everything he wants in life until he doesn’t. His job suddenly disappears, and then he gets a call to scare him. His mother has disappeared.
Somewhere along the way, he saves a fox, who ends up following him as he goes to help his sister in finding his mother. Once home it becomes apparent how distant his relationship with his father has become.
I don’t want to go into it too much, but just, WOW!
A delicate, unique way of detailing the complex relationship of a father and son, with the added bonus of a talking fox!
Palmer has an intriguing writing style, and the book’s different voices are highlighted in different ways through the prose format.
It may not be for everyone, but if it is for you, it is guaranteed to be a hit!
Many thanks to NetGalley and Headline for an ARC.

Releasing 14th March, 2024

The Lifeline by Tom Ellen
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Oh my goodness, I LOVED this book so much!
The scene is set five years ago with a young journalist and the lead singer of an up-and-coming band meeting at an interview and hitting it off in multiple ways.
Fast forward to the present.
Annie is stuck in a mediocre job for an online website, writing content that is nothing groundbreaking. Then her boss throws her a lifeline, but it means interviewing someone she really doesn’t want to.
Will is in a dead-end job, barely existing, and he spends his spare time helping out on an anonymous crisis line. This wasn’t the life he dreamed of.
Through twists of fate, Annie and Will end up on the phone, unidentified, and they develop a strong bond despite not knowing anything about one another.
But fate has other ideas…
I was gripped through the whole story and whizzed through it in a day. As a reader, you know what you want to happen, but you have to see the grizzly bits through first until fate finally delivers!
Many thanks to NetGalley and HQ for an ARC.

Releasing 29th February, 2024

Mrs. Quinn’s Rise to Fame by Olivia Ford
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

What a beautiful book!
I love GBBO as much as anyone else, and preparing to read a story based on a similar programme excited me. But the biggest pull was that the main character was a woman in her senior years.
Jenny Quinn is seventy-seven years old. She doesn’t feel like she has achieved much in her life, apart from being a brilliant baker, her husband of fifty-nine years, Bernard, would agree. As would her neighbours and family, who are treated to her baking delights regularly.
She watches Britan Bakes regularly, and this year, something prompted her to apply. She is probably the most shocked when she is invited to an audition. Keeping that a secret is one of the hardest things for her, as she hides nothing from Bernard.
Well, almost nothing. There is one more secret. Something huge that eats away at Jenny. It is revealed in short bursts through the story, as we see Jenny’s journey through the contest, how she has to deal with modern life alongside her traditional way of baking and living, and how she interacts with the different people she meets along the way.
I don’t quite know how to praise this book as much as I want to. I loved it. Jenny is a beautiful character, as is Bernard. I already recommended this one to my mum!
Many thanks to NetGalley and Michael Joseph, Penguin Random House, for an ARC.

Releasing 28th March, 2024

Starting Over by Kay Bratt
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

With this eighth instalment in the Hart’s Ridge series, Kay Bratt has done it again!
We have each family member beginning to move forward in their disrupted lives, and of course, there is an awful case that Taylor has to help solve, too.
Initially, this was meant to be the last in the series, but I am thankful that Bratt has decided to continue for now with another story in the series, and now I can’t wait for that, too!

Hunter’s Christmas and Other Stories.: A gripping collection of short stories especially for crime fiction readers. by Val Penny
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I’ve not read Val Penny’s books as yet, but I was sent this collection, and I must say that this collection of stories has whetted my appetite for the different series Penny writes.
Each of the stories hook you in. Some are slightly longer, involving two of Penny’s famous DIs, and some are shorter, but each story is captivating, and I thoroughly enjoyed each one!
It has made me want to add the rest of Penny’s books to my neverending TPR pile!

Out 16th January, 2024. Bettina will be joining me for a Book and a Brew in January, so I will share my review then!

The Household by Stacey Halls
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Having read The Familiars, I was intrigued to read another of Stacey Halls’s historical books, and The Household did not disappoint.
With a base planted in truth, Halls adds a layer of imagination to the story of Charles Dickens’ home for fallen women, Urania Cottage, backed by Miss Burdett-Coutts and some of its earliest (fictitious) residents.
In the 1800s, Dickens had the idea of creating this refuge or home to rehabilitate those known as fallen women, teaching them household jobs and skills, with a view to transporting them to Australia to start new lives.
In reality, he had much to do with choosing the women granted access to this opportunity. In the book, we don’t see much of Dickens. The story revolves around the girls who are the first residents and their backstories, as well as the horrific stalking that Angela Burdett-Coutts experienced for a length of time.
The historical aspect of the story, peppered with facts but liberally seasoned with fiction leaves readers with a wonderful reading experience.
And a mention of Gravesend (my home for 20 years!) at the end made my day!
Many thanks to Netgalley and Bonnier Books for an ARC.

Releasing 11th April, 2024

Christmas at the Keanu Kindness Café by Isabella May
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Evie meets Joe while she is dressed as the Sugarplum Fairy and he the Nutcracker. Sounds like it was meant to be from the off… however, if that were that, we would be finished within the first couple of chapters.
No. Evie is not feeling things at work as an editor or in her personal life. The chance meeting with the fancy-dressed Joe sparks a moment of reprieve until he disappears.
Disheartened, she takes extended leave from her job and disappears to Glastonbury, recommended by a work colleague, Milly.
There, she meets a host of intriguing characters who take an interest in her life, and she is led to the Keanu Kindness Cafe. I LOVED this concept. Keanu Reeves is one of the most amazing souls out there, and to have a cafe dedicated to him and his philanthropic work was an idea of genius, as was the RAOK jar!
Oh, and Joe? He turns up, too! What a coincidence! There is a brilliant ‘will they/won’t they?’ aspect of the story as it builds, and faces Evie would rather not see turn up, too.
Great fun, and a wonderful way to get into the Christmas Spirit!

Very Very Lucky by Amanda Prowse
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Another beautiful story written by the queen of women’s fiction, Amanda Prowse!
This story follows the lives of two individuals, with no real connection, from different walks of life, who somehow meet and enrich the life of the other.
Emma is drowning in responsibility, with three children, each with different needs and demands, a husband who does try to help, a best friend with a bombshell of her own, and an ailing mother who requires her support, all while grieving her father.
Thurston is an octagenarian, recently bereaved, losing his beloved wife of sixty-two years. He feels life is not worth living without his precious wife.
A chance meeting sparks the beginning of an unconventional friendship, where they slowly change each other’s thinking.
I loved the main characters Prowse created here. Both are relatable to readers. Emma, the rushed off her feel mother, with so much going on, hit a nerve with me. Thurston is the nail on the head as that man who devoted his life to a woman and feels lost without her beside him. The cast of side characters was brilliant, too, from Roz, Emma’s best friend, to Nancy, Thursston’s niece and the piece in the puzzle that initially connects the two.
Grief is the story’s main theme, and how we can overcome it without forgetting.
A beautiful read, as always.

Releasing 7th January 2024

The Love Interest by Victoria Walters
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is the first of Victoria Walter’s books I have read, and I thoroughly enjoyed it!
Firstly, I love a book set in the book world (A library), with literature and writing at the heart, as well as romantic films!
Liv is working in her dream place, in a university library, with a colleague turned best friend, Stevie, living with her brother Dan, in London. Her dream of writing a romantic book floats in her mind, but she feels it will never happen, seeing as she can’t even sort her love life out.
Enter her brother’s best friend, Aiden. Annoying, and her nemesis for the last ten years. She suddenly finds herself living with and working with him as he changes jobs and needs a place to stay,
But, the thing is, they have history. A past event which haunts her, and an annoyingly sexy Irish accent to go with his annoyingly Mr Darcy-esque looks…
As Liv battles to control her emotions, inspiration strikes and she begins writing her first ever romantic novel, with, annoyingly, Aiden as the base for her romantic lead. And as she writes, life begins to imitate her art, or is it the other way round?
This was a fun, easy read, I loved Liv and her fantastic dress sense! Her confusion at her feelings makes for a great story, and Aiden reads like the perfect romantic hero. A great enemies-to-lovers story with a little bit of a spice alert, too!
Many thanks to NetGalley and Boldwood Books for an ARC.

Releasing 12th February, 2024

Courier by Zoe Rosi
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I’ve thoroughly enjoyed Zoe Rosi’s thrillers so far, and Courier was no different, but unique in its way.
Bob is a courier who becomes infatuated with the haunted-looking face of a woman in a house where he makes deliveries. His infatuation leads him to become much more involved in her life than he should, as he begins to dream of a future and becoming her saviour. Something quite easy for a faceless delivery man who no one takes notice of.
Courier is a novella written in the first person, filled with twists and turns that keep a reader involved in the story from beginning to end. I have to say I felt quite sorry for Bob and his life, though I wouldn’t recommend the route he decides to take!
A well-written story about stalking and obsession and consequences.
I will definitely be paying more attention to our couriers in the future, that’s for sure!
Many thanks to NetGalley and Lighthouse Press for an ARC.

Releasing 30th January, 2024

So, tell me what you have been reading, and what caught your eye from the above!

Good Scammer by Guy Kennaway @guyken  #BlogTour #BookReview @fmcmassociates

Today, I am on the blog tour for Guy Kennaway’s soon-to-be released, Good Scammer.

The Blurb

Sometimes you must break the rules when your dignity and survival call for it.

With an unlikely partnership at its heart and based on true events, Good Scammer tells the extraordinary story of Clive ‘Bangaz’ Thompson, the local hero who has turned Campbell’s Cove into the scamming capital of the world, and Willy, a broke, middle-aged writer, who needs one more bestselling novel to save him from financial ruin.

Bangaz is an orphan born in West Jamaica, raised with no love, no education and no prospects of decent work. After losing his job within Jamaica’s booming hotel industry, and with a baby daughter to feed, Bangaz is forced to turn elsewhere for money. He devises an ingenious business model. For “a small handling fee”, wealthy Americans can avoid paying taxes on their recent surprise lottery win… His plan will bring millions of dollars to the little villages around the Jamaican coast each year, making Bangaz a very wealthy man – and a hero in his community.

But in building his empire, Bangaz has made some dangerous enemies, from local gangsters, to the FBI – and they’re closing in. Before it’s too late, Bangaz commissions Willy Loxley-Gordon, a washed-up English writer living nearby to write his story. Willy reluctantly agrees, recognising that this could be his last chance for success.

Compulsively readable and delivered with Guy Kennaway’s signature sense of quirky humour, Good Scammer is a transporting hymn of love to West Jamaica, which challenges our assumptions about the morality of crime, in an astute exploration of slavery, colonialism, theft and victimhood.

Releasing 23rd January, 2024

My Review

Good Scammer by Guy Kennaway
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I love it when a book is written with the language or accent affectations of its setting.
Good Scammer is a fantastic book set in Jamaica, sprinkled liberally with Patois.
It tells the story of Clive ‘Bangaz’ Thompson, a local of Campbell Cove. He is not educated formally, with little literacy in English and only the minimal support of the aunt who begrudgingly brought him up. However, he has brains, which he uses to create a huge scam operation that brings prosperity to the community he lives in and provides for his family and partner, Pauline and their two daughters.
All this is done with no violence or guns. Bangaz feels like he has found a way to gain repayment of generations of debt from slavery and colonialism.
Things are never simple, and there are some real fixes he finds himself in, but I loved the way the story was told, with men showing that laidback attitude that is synonymous with the people of Jamaica.
Bangaz finds an author whom he wants to tell his story, with the idea of getting it published, and the story goes back and forth from the past to the present with Willy, the writer in question, trying to make sense of this unimaginable life of the gentle gangster in front of him.
I enjoyed this book.

About the Author

Guy Kennaway is a writer of fiction and memoir, born in the UK and who has lived in Jamaica for the past 35 years. One day, a man he had known since he was a child, demanded that Guy write his life story – of how he became one of the best scammers in West Jamaica.

Guy is best known for his novels One People, about village life in Jamaica; Bird Brain, about a bunch of optimistic pheasants, and for his memoirs Time To Go about killing his mother (with her permission) and Sunbathing Naked and Other Miracle Cures. His most recent novel, The Accidental Collector, won the Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize for Comic Fiction in 2021. His most recent memoir is Foot Notes, a broad comedy about race and nationality which he wrote with his daughter-in-law’s brother Hussein Sharif.

In Jamaica, Guy runs a campaign called Speak Properly: Chat Patwa, encouraging the promotion of patwa as an accepted language.

‘In all my writing my aim is to delight and amuse,’ Kennaway has said. ‘Hopefully I make people laugh out loud. Laughter is our most effective weapon in the battle against the difficulties and struggles of life. If I can transport my reader to a happy, joyful world, my mission is successful.’

Book and a Brew with Ritu – Hunter’s Christmas by Val Penny @valeriepenny @spellbound #NewRelease

I have another repeat visitor!

Today, I am hosting prolific Crime writer and fellow Spellbound author, Val Penny, about her latest release, Hunter’s Christmas and Other Stories!

Hello, and welcome back to But I Smile Anyway, Val!

Thank you for inviting me to your blog today, Ritu. Let me tell your readers about my books, my main character, DI Hunter Wilson and my new book, a collection of short stories, Hunter’s Christmas.

Sounds like a plan, Valb ut let me just sort you out with a cup of Earl Grey tea, because I remember you like that!

I’d love a cup of Earl Grey tea, no milk, please.

No problem at all!

Right, so I’m settled with my Chai Latte. Tell us all about your wonderful books, Val.

I have been building a collection of short stories for a few years now, and at last, I have had the opportunity to share these with my readers.

I usually write crime fiction set in Edinburgh, the capital city of Scotland, but this allowed me to set some of the tales further afield and explore new characters, too. This has been a joy.

I decided to write crime fiction because that is the genre I most enjoy reading. I was also a lawyer for many years, a lifetime ago and met many of the types of people I write about.

Life and experience are always fodder for a writer’s mind…

When I was initially choosing where to set my books, I considered creating an imaginary Scottish town, much like Peter Robinson who created the fictional English town of Eastvale in the Yorkshire Dales. However, When I thought about it, Edinburgh is a small city (about 600,000 people) and is a place many people know about through travel documentaries or have visited on vacation. It has a wide variety of types of housing, universities, a prison a beach and hills so why not base my stories there. But in this collection my characters are not all based in Scotland, some of the tales are set in Europe, and one in the USA.

I enjoyed your Scottish-based stories and the others, too! I’ve never been to Scotland, but love reading stories based there. One day, though.

My characters face many unpleasant characters and difficult situations in my novels. I am often asked if these are based on real events. The answer is a resounding, sometimes.

Authors are terrible thieves and grab ideas or characters from all sorts of places: a couple overheard in a coffee shop, a man talking on the phone on a train, or an event reported in a newspaper or on television. I have notebooks everywhere to jot down ideas or phrases as they come to me. Indeed, as I live in the very wet West of Scotland, one of the best presents I ever got was a waterproof notebook! You will often see me using this at bus stops or in train stations during a sudden downpour.

Oh, gosh, I know that feeling, Val! I have to be so careful not to write specific characters, and instead, I use quirks and phrases instead to get a feel for the character I am writing, instead of just writing about someone straight!

My new book is my first venture into a collection of short stories instead of a novel. The title story, Hunter’s Christmas, takes a festive look at Edinburgh. However, there are a total of twelve stories, three featuring DI Hunter Wilson, three featuring DS Jane Renwick, and the others that showcase different characters in a variety of settings. I hope readers will enjoy the diversion.

Well, I thoroughly enjoyed the book, and I think it has whetted my appetite to read some of the full-length novels. They are officially on my TBR!

Although my stories and characters are not autobiographical, there is definitely a lot of me and my life experience in my stories, and I hope that readers enjoy that and their visits with me to Edinburgh, too.

I feel the same way about my writing, too. Thank you so much for sharing a bit more about your inspiration, Val. 🙂

 Thank you again for inviting me to your blog today and allowing me to share some secrets about DI Hunter Wilson with your readers.

My pleasure 😊 Wishing this, and all your future releases much success, Val!

Now here is the blurb to whet your appetites! It sounds pretty good!

The Blurb

DI Hunter Wilson is looking forward to spending a holiday in India with his girlfriend Dr Meera Sharma, away from the cold, wet winter of Edinburgh. He looks to share his happiness with others when he is attacked by Santa Claus, he says.

His team swing into action to catch his attackers but then receive information about an elf found dead in a car park and a car stolen by Mrs Claus.

Are the crimes by these Christmas characters connected?

Can Hunter’s team restore peace and goodwill to Christmas?

Hunter’s Christmas and Other Stories includes tales about DI Hunter Wilson and DS Jane Renwick along with those about new and different characters in this gripping collection of short stories especially for crime fiction readers.

My Review

Hunter’s Christmas and Other Stories.: A gripping collection of short stories especially for crime fiction readers. by Val Penny
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I’ve not read Val Penny’s books as yet, but I was sent this collection, and I must say that this collection of stories has whetted my appetite for the different series Penny writes.
Each of the stories hook you in. Some are slightly longer, involving two of Penny’s famous DIs, and some are shorter, but each story is captivating, and I thoroughly enjoyed each one!
It has made me want to add the rest of Penny’s books to my neverending TPR pile!

Hunter’s Chase – https://geni.us/ic7r

Hunter’s Revenge – https://geni.us/a13c

Hunter’s Force – https://geni.us/f5eJb

The First Cut – https://linktr.ee/spellboundbks

Hunter’s Blood – https://tinyurl.com/8rrpp59x

Hunter’s Secret – https://tinyurl.com/ezer746e

Hunter’s Christmas – https://rb.gy/9d79us

Author Biography

Val Penny has an LLB degree from the University of Edinburgh and her MSc from Napier University. She has had many jobs including hairdresser, waitress, banker, azalea farmer and lecturer but has not yet achieved either of her childhood dreams of being a ballerina or owning a candy store.

Until those dreams come true, she has turned her hand to writing poetry, short stories, nonfiction books, and novels. Her novels are published by SpellBound Books Ltd.

Val is an American author living in SW Scotland. She has two adult daughters, of whom she is justly proud, and lives with her husband and their cat.

www.valpenny.com

https://www.facebook.com/Authorvalpenny

www.facebook.com/valerie.penny.739

www.facebook.com/groups/296295777444303

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/17300087.Val_Penny

https://www.bookbub.com/profile/val-penny

Twitter: @valeriepenny

November 2023 Books #AmReading

Can you believe we are one month away from another year?

Okay, so I got through all the arcs I had been sent by November 5th… Will I have managed to not say yes to anymore? Will that TBR pile get any smaller? BEcause I need to be writing my own book, too!

Christmas Hearts by Tammy L. Grace
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is a simple, sweet addition to the Soul Sisters collection, where we focus on Leslie and the rekindling of her romance with her ex-husband Eric.
It can’t be easy, living in the same small town and avoiding one another, but somehow she has managed for three years, then fate takes charge, and she ends up with a Christmas wish come true, as well as helping to make the wish of another a reality too.
Sweet story.

Released 17th November, 2023

Back to her future by Cary J. Hansson
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

We are all flawed.
We, our parents, and our children will be too.
The thing is, some of our flaws will inevitably hurt those we love, even if that is not the desired effect.
Back To Her Future is a deep story of culture, identity and the need to conform.
Meryam is estranged from her whole family, yet on his deathbed, her father calls for her. He imparts a secret buried thirty-odd years previously that impacts everything Meryam’s adult life was built on.
I don’t want to go into detail. Still, the story deals with the sometimes stifling expectations of certain cultures, the necessity of conforming when moving to different countries, and the need to maintain one’s culture.
She’s been through hell as she grew up, but Meryam is unaware of certain reasons behind the decisions that shaped her future.
As she goes on a journey of discovery, she rekindles friendships lost many decades before and learns some upsetting truths.
Sensitively done.

Released 1st November, 2023

Sisterhood by Cathy Kelly
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Another fantastic Cathy Kelly story.
Lou’s life turns upside down on her fiftieth birthday as her mother reveals a huge secret.
Together with her sister, Toni, Lou heads off in search of the truth, as well as to find herself and build an inner strength that she had lost.
There were plenty of twists within this tale, but the character development was fantastic. There could have been a simple HEA, but the way Kelly took the story meant the characters and we, the readers, must work for it.
Lou is there for everyone. She helps to keep her whole family on an been keel, from her husband to her mother, as well as being the organised brain behind the company she works for.
Tori is that confident woman who appears to have it all.
Both sisters learn disturbing facts about their families and lives, which means they end up on a trip to Sicily to find out what the truth is.
Their mother, Lillian, is a nasty piece of work, though.
So many women out there end up like Lou, taken for granted. The ones who keep everyone else going, anticipating all needs, and dropping everything at the drop of a hat to make life easier for others. I love that this ends with Lou finding herself and realising she can still be there for others without losing herself.
Many thanks to NetGalley and Harper Collins UK for an ARC.

Releasing 15th February, 2024

The Eternal Bachelor: The perfect friends to lovers romance to fall in love with by Lizzie Chantree
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I have thoroughly enjoyed the Cherry Blossom Lane series and was eager for this third instalment, where the story develops between the third friend in the group, Demi, and the third of the brothers, Miles.
Right from the previous stories, I have wanted to shake Demi. Her relationship with her long-term boyfriend appears a bit toxic, and we see the extent through this book.
Miles’ unrequited love for his best friend, Demi, has been noted throughout the last two books, and his friends are aware, too. Pretty much everyone can see, apart from Demi.
It was great to see Demi’s character develop over this story, and we visibly see her backbone gaining strength as she navigates a breakup, leaving the one job she thought she would do forever and begins to understand the feelings of her best friend and the fact that she may just feel the same way.
Miles is a great character. He’s been touted as the playboy kind, but he has a heart of gold.
The best thing about a series is that you get to revisit some of the characters from past stories, and though this can be read as a stand-alone, it’s always great to find out what is going on with other favourites!
Exactly the HEA we all want, with a few spanners thrown in, because it can’t be that easy, can it? I don’t know if there is scope for any more books in this series, but there are a few side characters who deserve a happy ending, too! (Hit hint, Lizzie Chantree!)

The Single Mums’ Book Club by Victoria Cooke
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A lovely, easy read about a single mum who finds herself lost in this new world of not being a traditional family unit.
Having lost contact with the ‘friends’ she had with her ex-husband, Steph is struggling.
A chance encounter with a neighbour she barely passes time with starts a chain of events that lead to them starting their own little book club, which, over the story increases in size as they find more and more women whom it will help.
Along the way, Steph finds herself and a new love interest, too!
I enjoyed reading this. It cheered me up no end.

Stand Up Guy: The most uplifting romance you’ll read this year by Nina Kaye
My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Nina will be on a blog tour stop in January when I will share my review, and possibly a Book & A Brew, too!

Releasing 18th January, 2024

A-Z of Warwick: Places-People-History by S. C. Skillman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

A-Z of Warwick: Places-People-History is a fascinating alphabetical collection of facts about Warwick.
I have always enjoyed SCSkillman’s Warwick-related books as I grew up not far from there, and many places she mentions are places I have visited.
It is an interesting read, where we learn many facts about the important people of Warwick, little tidbits of information about historical aspects and some wonderful stories about key locations.
I always enjoy reading about Warwick Castle as we visited there many times as a family.
It’s an interesting read with plenty to enchant you!
https://www.amberley-books.com/az-of-warwick.html

Releasing 7th December, 2023

Blog Tour post will include the review in December.

Fairytale of New York by Zoë Folbigg
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Charlie Brown is an in-demand make-up artist with fantastic friends, a home of her own, Mabel the cat, and the perfect partner she is off to visit in New York right after her current job ends.
Only, when she gets there, do things start to go wrong.
Stranded in New York, Charlie ends up on a strange journey, meeting handsome strangers, discovering horrifying secrets, and leaving there even more confused than before.
I thoroughly enjoyed this story. I won’t say it was a light-hearted read, as there are some more delicate matters within, but it was a good read, and I have to say I loved Pete and his family.
Charlie’s support network in London and at home with her parents is awesome, and Mabel the cat is just wonderful.

Enemies to Lovers by Portia MacIntosh
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Enemies to Lovers gives the game away with the title from the off. Yes, this is a story, and the trope is exactly that. Enemies to Lovers.
Two people who have an age-old vendetta against one another, Lara and Sonny, work together as journalists in the same role, but for two separate magazines. There is plenty of one-upmanship going on all the time.
One such occurrence goes a step too far and their editors decide to send them off on a secret mission, where they will need to spend a lot of time together, which is not something either of them want to do.
The concept is there. It’s an easy read. They hate each other, then they fall in lust/love. With a job to complete on the side!
Many thanks to NetGalley and Boldwood Books for an ARC.

Releasing 4th January, 2023

Releasing 23rd January, 2024

Blog tour appearance in January will contain my review.

Wait for January when Jeevani is visiting my blog for a Book and a Brew. I’ll share my review, then!

Releasing 11th January, 2024

So, tell me what you have been reading, and what caught your eye from the above!

Book & A Brew with Ritu and Jodie Homer @umbrellacafe A Village Called Christmas #BookReview #BookAndABrew

Another repeat offender, today! Jodie Homer has popped over to talk a little about her Christmas inspiration, since she has a lovely Christmas story out!

Hello, and welcome back to But I Smile Anyway,Jodie! I think we should skip the choices and have a huge hot chocolate with whipped cream, and a few gingerbread me, what do you think?

Thank you so much for having me Ritu.

Can you tell us why Christmas means something special to you?

So I absolutely love Christmas. I love Christmas music more than any other music and when the shops have all their cards in them with the music playing it’s my favourite time.

Me, too! Recently, my daughter has become quite partial to Christmas-related music, too, however, she draws the line at me singing along in the shops!

It all started when I was younger and every year we would go to my Nan’s for Christmas. We’d leave our house on Christmas Eve and my Nan would have a table full of goodies laid out for us all to have and that would be chocolates, nuts just all sorts of things.

I wonder if she stockpiled them in advance, and had to hide everything from the rest of the household? I know I have to do that!

Christmas morning I would have a huge stocking at the end of my bed full of presents which I brought downstairs and opened with the family and then we would have dinner in the backroom. My Nan’s Christmas dinners were always the best.

Since we aren’t Christian, Christmas isn’t something we celebrate for religious reasons, however, we have always loved to take part in any festive seasons, and for me, the Christmas dinner is one of the best things about this time of year! I am rather naughty, and end up eating one at least three times; at school with the kids, on our Christmas do, and on Christmas day! Sometimes we have two, if we go and see my parents in the following days! Here, my sister-in-law and I cook for the family, then, if we are at my parents, I help my mum, who is a fantastic cook!

Later on in the day the rest of the family would come around and I would see cousins and aunties and we would just celebrate us all being together.

That sounds like a wonderful festive season. I can see why it brings back such lovely feelings, Jodie!

Thank you so much for sharing your Christmas joy, Jodie!

Thank you so much for having me today. 😊

Good luck with your latest release!

The Blurb

Holly loves Christmas but when she comes home and catches her boyfriend in bed with her boss she escapes her life and ends up in a village called Christmas. When she meets the Claus family she begins to realise it definitely does take a community to celebrate Christmas as she gets stuck into the village festivities can the dashing single farmer Joseph Claus fix her heartbreak? Is the answer to Holly’s broken heart hidden in a village called Christmas?

My Review

A Village Called Christmas by Jodie Homer
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I love a bit of Christmas, and Jodie Homer’s latest story is packed with all the festive feels you could want!
Holly loves Christmas, but her latest one looks set to run a bit flat, what with a broken relationship as well as sudden unemployment under her belt.
She finds herself in this quaint little village and decides to give it a chance. But will it give her a chance?
Who wouldn’t want to stumble upon a village called Christmas, where everything and everyone has a Noel-themed connection? I enjoyed this easy read, filled with all things Christmas, including a wonderfully sweet romance.
A whimsical tale jam-packed with positivity and festive miracles – truly feel good!

About the Author

Jodie lives in a small village in Solihull with her husband and two children. She loves nothing more than dancing around embarrassingly to 90s music and eating mint chocolate. Jodie enjoys reading and writing books full of romance and swoon-worthy fictional men.

Follow Jodie on Social Media!

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/jodietheauthor

Twitter
https://twitter.com/umbrellacafe

Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/jodie_loves_books/

Goodreads
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/21824053.Jodie_Homer?ref=nav_profile_l

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