So, I shall be trying to keep up with Linda’s JusJoJan challenge this month, as well as getting back into the swing of things with school and trying to exercise a bit more and write… phew! (Anyone know how to add a few more hours in the day?)
Welcome to the daily prompt! Today is your second prompt for Just Jot it January 2023, and it’s brought to you by Willow. Thank you, Willow! Please be sure to visit Willow’s blog to read her post and say hello. And follow her while you’re there, if you’re not already.
Your prompt for JusJoJan, January 2nd 2023, is “constellation.” Use the word “constellation” any way you’d like. Have fun!
Now, I’m not an astronomer…so I have no telescopes or fancy camera to aim into the sky, so I can see and identify planets, specific stars or constellations…
But I do love a clear night, where I look up and see the twinkling in the sky. Not having that extra technology means that I give those stars my full attention.
Here, at the new house, we often seem to have clear nights. Maybe it’s because we are in the countryside, so there is less pollution. I don’t know.
But when we still lived at the old place, I was able to point to one particular cluster, and identify it as The Big Dipper!
And there ends my thoughts on the word of today… Thank you to my blog sis, Willow for the prompt!
You got your drink? I’m nursing my cuppa today, calmly, which will be a different matter from next week, as well be back into the seeing of school! Still, let me relax today …
If we were having chai, I’d start by saying this week has felt very long but also extremely short as well! As I mentioned the last week, Pops and Mum were coming over for a few days, so on Boxing day, we had our second family Christmas dinner with them! No,w in our new home, we still don’t have a decent dining area, so we usually feast in the living room during the colder months and the conservatory when it’s warmer. So our dinner was on our makeshift table in the living room!
If we were having chai, I’d mention that we popped over to the in-laws on Tuesday so my parents could visit, and we paid our respects. at the gurdwara, and then on Wednesday, we had a trip to Bluewater, seeing as there were vouchers to be spent and post-Christmas sales!
If we were having chai, I’d say that Pops and Mum headed off on Thursday morning after a lovely visit, even though it sped by, then Lil Princess and I attended a long awaited appointment, for something she’s been struggling with. I’ll tell you about it, one day… Just not yet…
If we were having chai, I’d tell you that I have been cooking more than usual, as well and I made an awesome (even if I do say so, myself!) shepherd’s pie for dinner one day!
If we were having chai, I couldn’t avoid the other event that took place, aka New Year! As always, we didn’t do anything crazy, but visited the in-laws in the afternoon, then saw the new year at home. As I posted yesterday, my new Word Of The Year is Strength, so let’s see how I get on with that! It’s also probably the last one for a while that we are all together, as this time next year, we will have a new adult in the house, and I am sure he will want to see in the New Year with his mates!
If we were having chai, I would give Sonu a couple of mentions since we had less pics of him the last few weeks. He’s had a fruitful festive period, with lots of family company. He was so excited to have Nanu and Nani (Pops and Mum) visit, as he always remembers them. He tried to get into their bags and left plenty of his fur for them to remember him by! Now, below, you can see some of his gifts! He got a teepee as well as a radiator bed, which he seems to enjoy. Bless him!
This week I shall savour Monday, as it is a bank holiday, before the craziness of the term starts up, again! I am back at school on Tuesday, and my kids are back on Wednesday. So the grindstone calls us! Elsewhere, we have nothing else planned, so let’s see how things go!
And while you’re here, did you sign up for my mailing list? I am in the middle of writing an exclusive Chickpea Curry Lit story for my subscribers, and there will be news, tips and even recipes! You know you want to join… go on! Click the pic below to sign up!
Hello, 2023. And wishing you all a Happy New Year, too!
I keep it a teeny bit subdued, as everything I get excited about something at the start, things have a tendency to nosedive…
There have been tremendous highs, like my publishing contract and the rerelease of Marriage Unarranged, and the positive outcome of the OFSTED inspection at school, but there have been horrendous lows, too. We’ve lost loved ones, and handled some more personal issues that I pray no one else ever has to handle, themselves…
And, as you are aware, I have chosen a word to accompany that year over the last few years, as I haven’t set resolutions..
2019 – it was SELF. And I am happy to say I have been pretty good at keeping that self-care up since then, too!
2020 – BELIEVE. Well, let’s all agree that 2020 was a kinda unbelievable year, all in all, with the pandemic and BLM… However, I did believe. And my beliefs meant that 2020 was the year I finally became a published author!
2021 – I chose the word HOPE. I think we all needed hope to pull us through what I found to be a tougher year than 2020 in many ways. I travelled through it, exhausted and worried about everyone and everything around me. But I did keep that hope alive, within.
2022 – my choice was CREATE. I’d like to think that I managed a bit of all that I had hoped to achieve!
So, last year I centred my Word Of The Year aspirations on these four things.
Create harmony in my household (with two teens, that will be a challenge!)
Now, that has been quite a biggie. I’ll be the first to admit that this hasn’t been easy, but it has taken a whole load of communication and understanding, education and listening, I think we have got there, just about. I can’t be specific here, but we have had a HELL of a year in some respects, and it has been tough trying to stay upbeat, all the time, but I feel like we are leaving 2022 with a fresh, better understanding of how to handle certain situations, and I’d like to think 2023 will echo that and continue on an upwards trajectory.
Create new dishes in my kitchen ( I just want to get cooking again!)
I may have started this one a little later in the year, but I am happy to say that I have got my cooking mojo back over the last couple of months. I have perfected old recipes and am trying out new ones, learning how to adapt recipes to suit the palates in this household, because goodness knows, there are a whole load of different preferences and tastes floating a
Create new traditions in our new house (New house, new traditions!)
We now have our own ways to celebrate special days that involve us and our household, i instead of always rushing off to the rest of the family. That is not to say that we don’t do that. It is as much of an important part of our special times as before, but we now make sure we do things in our own home, too.
Create new adventures for others to read (That’s the biggie!)
Well, I definitely achieved that one! Book two Straight As A Jalebi is with the publisher, already, and is due for a release in 2023!
So, which word do I add to my list for 2023?
I thought long and hard and came up with this:
Strength
Build my strength up physically, as I know that will help me as I enter that middle-aged time of life.
Have the strength to face all the ups and downs that will come because that is life.
Be strong for my family and have the strength to fight for what is right for them, not the rest of the world.
Build my community around me, be it my physical friends and family or my online ones, as there is strength in numbers.
Ensure I keep the strength in myself so that I never lose myself under the demands of my life.
And with this post, off I go to start that new year, filled with Self, Belief, Hope, creation and STRENGTH!
A December post means the end of the year! How did that happen? 😱
It’s a month filled with excitement and all things festive, as well as lots of chances to be gifted new books… and the holidays give a chance to read. How will I do this month??
Well, for a start, the plan to read my TBR went to pot, as I was inundated with amazing ARCS that I just had to read first!
So that makes 14 books read this month and just one ARC left on my NetGalley pile. Will 2023 be the year I crack that TBR Pile in half??
You’ll have to scroll to the end to see my Goodreads Book Challenge result for this year!
I love a story revolving around family, and it was great to read about this Latino American group of cousins, their life and relationship with each other, as well as what is going on in their own lives. I thought it would get a little confusing with the different POVs, but it was easy to keep a track of what was happening, and generally an enjoyable read.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading Fairies, Myths & Magic book 2, as it brought a sprinkling of mysticism to the darkening nights. Colleen Chesebro has woven her poetic verse and stories within recounts of various myths and legends, all things fae, and it won my heart! The first story, about the changeling, was my favourite read. These things fascinate me, and if you are looking for something to add a little magic to your life, then you should really pick up a copy of this!
I enjoyed Amanda James’ book the Forgotten Beach, and The Secret Keeper is written in the same beautiful way. Rosa heads off to Tintagel to fulfil the last wish of her Grandmother as she lies waiting to take her last breaths. She arrives, emotional and sceptical, But, something in the air gets to her, as she begins to sense and see things she wouldn’t usually believe. The addition of the mysterious, but handsome Talen, adds to the mystery. What a beautiful love story, or rather two; one tragic and one a blossoming one, with plenty of ups and downs. I really don’t want to give much away, but the story involves some folklore, spirits, and a whole lot of belief. I loved it. Many thanks to NetGalley and Harper Collins UK for an ARC
I sped through this book, the first in a new series (Yay!) by Kay Bratt. Kay is such a talented author with fiction that spans different genres, and this one gives a cosy mystery crime thriller kind of vibe. Taylor is a Deputy in a small town called Hart’s Ridge. Her past weighs heavy on her day-to-day duties as a member of the local police force, especially when small children are involved. A small girl wandering into a local convenience store, alone, hungry and distressed, brings out the mama bear in Taylor as she tries to find answers as to where this little girl has come from. Taylor’s innate sense of what appears right or wrong helps her to solve a huge mystery, all while dealing with her own pretty dysfunctional family; her alcoholic father and three younger siblings, one of whom keep going missing. And her canine companion, Barnard, is an interesting soul with a back story of his own that Taylor fights hard to find out. I was fully invested in the story and cannot wait to read the next one!
What’s the plan when you find out you can see ghosts, but you don’t realise you might just be falling in love with one? That’s Gemma’s conundrum. She’s known about her ability for a while and spent a few years helping hapless spirits find their way. Then she meets Levi. Except, things are a bit different with him because he’s been sent to help her, too… Gemma is a happy soul, with her worries that she carries hidden away. Levi is a grump. He didn’t want to die when he did, and he had a chance to change his fate… But things happen. You can never anticipate what your feelings will do. An enjoyable paranormal romance read that is not filled with spooky stuff but rather more about emotions. Many thanks to Netgalley and Harper Collins UK, One More Chapter for an ARC.
Now I love a bit of Bridgerton, and I am all about diversity in all walks of life, so to read this dream of a book set in the early 20th century, based on one of a handful of wealthy Black families in a changing America, was pretty mesmerising! The Davenports are rich. Richer than many of their White counterparts and certainly the richest Black family in the area. Their three children are of marriageable age, and the story shows that it doesn’t matter the colour of your skin, your children can be just as much of a handful as the next person! Olivia, the oldest, is ready to conform. She knows her future is finding the right man to take as a husband, and she is well on the way. John is the sole male heir to the Davenport Carriage Company, a business built up from scratch by his father, a formerly enslaved man, who has worked hard to bring himself and his family to the heights they now rest. But he has dreams too, that go against the grain of his father’s thinking. Helen is the youngest and the polar opposite of her sister, wanting to push boundaries further by working, helping her brother to set up a new business, and getting her hands dirty, literally, instead of wearing silken gloves, awaiting being presented as ready for marriage. The problem is, having your future prescribed is often the reason you want something different, which is exactly what these young people face. Forbidden love, unheard-of dreams, and previously unreachable ambitions all pull together to make for an amazing story. I am so glad this is the first of a series because I have definitely been left wanting more! Many thanks to Netgalley and Penguin Random House for an ARC.
I have read a few of Erica James’ books in the past, and the evocative stories have always enthralled me. A Secret Garden Affair was no different. Partially set in the early 1980s and with a timeline starting sixty years previous, the story follows several characters. Libby, a woman whose wedding plans are cancelled when she finds out her fiance is cheating on her, and her great aunt, Bess, who has worked for the third main character, Elfrida, for the best part of her life. Running to Larkspur House, where Bess works, and a place filled with happy memories for Libby, she tries to make life easier for the two older women who mean so much to her but unearths truths and secrets she had no idea about. A story of friendship, classism, forbidden love, disappointments and celebrations, losing and finding precious memories and forgiveness. I really enjoyed it. Many thanks to NetGalley and HQ for an ARC.
I think I have read pretty much all of Katie Fforde’s books, and though this wasn’t my favourite, it was still an easy read. Set in the 60s, Meg is called to her mother’s workplace to help out. It is a quaint hotel that is barely breathing, with the opening of a newer, more modern hotel nearby, complete with ensuite bathrooms and a highly-rated chef as the owner. Meg hasn’t got much professional training, but what she does have is passion, ideas and empathy, which endear her to the staff and guests alike. Shame it doesn’t seem to be the case for the owner’s son, who firmly believes that women shouldn’t be in charge of a professional kitchen at all. Family politics, whimsical stories of the past, and a lot of passion for this project make the tale a lovely read. Many thanks to NetGalley and Random House UK for an ARC.
This was my second Gillian Harvey read, and I wasn’t disappointed. Katy is at that time of her life when her child has flown the nest (rather far, actually, to Australia, and decided to stay there a while longer), and her husband wants a break which appears to be more permanent than she originally thought. She’s devastated. After trying her hardest to change things up, enrolling in a BootCamp with her friends, and generally making herself more like she thinks her husband wants, her whole future is up in the air. Then her friends take her away on a trip to France. Katy begins to rediscover herself and finds she rather likes what she remembers. Could romance be on the cards? There is something in this story that could speak to every woman of a certain age. We are battling with perimenopause and that feeling of being there for the use of the rest of the family, not ourselves. I just loved how even though there were down moments, Katy was able to find herself in a way that she could enjoy a future that would embrace her as a person, not just a plus one. Lovely read! Many Thanks to NetGalley and Boldwood Books for an ARC.
Three siblings mourning the loss of their much-loved father. One finds a stash of cash hidden by the man they thought they knew, and it raises all sorts of dilemmas. Should they be honest and pass it over to the police for investigation? Declare it as part of his estate, risking losing a huge chunk to inheritance tax, or divvy it up between the three? Each of the three siblings is very different in their thoughts. Caroline is married to Max, the eldest son. She found the money. Her instincts, and that of her husband, are to keep everything above board. Ellie, the middle sibling starts off thinking the same, but her husband Jamie discloses information that makes them want the money more. Nathan, the youngest, wants his share because he needs it, and now. The story is filled with moral dilemmas and explores relationships between eh siblings, as well as the couples. I enjoyed this read. Thank you to Amazon Publishing for sending me a copy of An Unwanted Inheritance to read and review. All opinions are my own.
What a beautiful book. Stella is the youngest of three women living together. Three women, all from one family, each a generation apart. Stella’s mother, Bonnie, and her grandmother, Florence, along with Stella, reside in the house that has been their home for decades. It’s the only home Bonnie and Stella have ever really known and the start of a lifetime of secrets that Florence started through no fault of her own. As Stella reaches a certain age, she chooses to use a sperm donor to give her the child she longs for. A lot of research goes into the final decision of the donor, but as the story unravels, it becomes obvious that what she thought would be the best choice and the reasons for thinking that may not always be the right one. Nature vs nurture is a strong theme, as well as family relationships. Florence is extremely strong and resilient, and her concern for the women in her family is palpable. We all need a gran like her! Really enjoyed this. Many thanks to NetGalley and Hodder & Stoughton for an ARC.
Alice has a life-changing moment when she is merely eight years old. Her world becomes filled with colours that can be pleasant and some that are the exact opposite. To be more precise, she sees colours associated with all the people, and even plants, around her. Like auras, but that’s not something she knows – yet. This confusing discovery is a lot for a child to take in, and it impacts her behaviours, as well as her relationships. She is already living with her two brothers and mother, who is deep in her own mental health issues, and as time goes by, she finds herself caring for her wheelchair-bound mother, living a life she is coping with but suffocating herself as well. She does manage to live a life of her own, with the urging of her older brother, and moves away from the toxic environment that is her childhood home. Over the years, and with the help of certain people, she begins to learn how to live with this ‘gift’, as it is described to her, but not without many battles. An interesting fictional recount of how someone with synesthesia may see life and the world around them. Many thanks to NetGalley and Harper Collins UK for an ARC.
This debut from Steve Jones was one I felt compelled to read after checking out the blurb. I’ll be honest, it didn’t grab me from the off. Not the kind of hook that ‘they’ all say is needed for a brilliant book. In fact, it took me a little while to get into the swing of the story, but when the phone appeared, I became more invested in it all. Our main character, Bob (Rob/Robert), is an older, driven, successful and somewhat selfish man with a huge block of guilt on his shoulder from a tragedy in his past. It’s driven him to be a person that is not likeable. When something rather mystical happens, and he is handed a phone that could change the past, he grabs the chance but doesn’t consider the butterfly effects of that one change in the past and what happens, because of it, in the future. There is a lot to grip you once the story begins to flow. An interesting read. Many thanks to NetGalley, Penguin Random House and Michael Joseph for an ARC.
Laura Jane, I do believe you have done it again! I have enjoyed Williams’ books so far, and this was so good. Becca is a hairstylist and salon owner in her mid-thirties, worried that her time will pass. A timely event at the salon includes a session with a woman who encourages manifestations. Becca chooses to manifest the love of her life into her life as soon as possible. Within hours she gets a text from her ex. Is it a sign? The story is told intriguingly, running along parallel timelines in two different scenarios. One where she doesn’t bother to answer the text and the other where she does… I can’t write too much about the story, but it is really well done! I loved Becca’s best friend, Jia Li, and her salon partner, Carlos. The tension, as it builds in both storylines, is palpable, and oh, I couldn’t wait to see how the end panned out in both versions. Great read! Many thanks to NetGalley and Random House UK for an ARC.
“I don’t know where I’m going from here, but I promise it won’t be boring.”
David Bowie
2022 was a bit of a year, wasn’t it, Peeps?
I can, hand on heart, say that I didn’t think things could get harder than 2020 and even 2021, but how wrong was I?
There were good, great times, but equally, I have had to face some of the toughest situations in my life, too.
Still, we got to the end, and, here we are, embarking on another year.
Another year where my son will make me the mother of an adult… gulp! And book baby 2 will be born, too…
I have plenty of hopes, which I will keep alive in my mind. I won’t start a bucket list of things to do this year because I find that never works… but, I’ll be back in a short while with my Word Of The Year, 2023, where I let you know exactly what I want to do next year!
So enjoy your day, Peeps, and may this be a wonderful year for us all!