“You don’t just wake u and become the butterfly. Growth is a process.”
Rupi Kaur
For Linda’s #1LinerWeds Challenge, and in the spirit of my WOTY for 2025 – Change
01 Jan 2025 12 Comments
in #1linerweds, #onelinerwednesday Tags: #jusjojan, #onelinerwednesday, Blog, Blog Post, Blogger, Blogging, Linda G Hill
“You don’t just wake u and become the butterfly. Growth is a process.”
Rupi Kaur
For Linda’s #1LinerWeds Challenge, and in the spirit of my WOTY for 2025 – Change
31 Dec 2024 6 Comments
in Reviews, Thoughts Opinions & Memories Tags: Am Reading, Arc, Blog, Blog Post, Blogger, Blogging, Book Review, Book Reviews, books, Goodreads, Netgalley, reading
Okay, now who went and pressed fast forward on the year? Come on, own up. How is it the end of December already?
Tis the season to be jolly and all that, and what is more festive than the lead-up to Christmas in a school, especially with the younger children? We’ve been making all sorts of Christmas crafts, had a Festive Fayre, performed a nativity, and juggled plenty of absences as the lurgy hit, and staff have scheduled days off, too. And then, school finishes in time for the craziness of the holidays. I’m just glad we aren’t back into school until the 6th Jan!
The big question is, what did I read, and did I manage to write anything?
This month, I realised I really cannot say no! I have numerous book tours in January, so there was a bit of reading for them, as well as everything else. (Hence the lack of actual reviews on here as I am saving them for the tour posts!
Writing – I thought I would end this month saying no new words, but I would be lying… I have written a tentative beginning for what could be book 4 in the Rishtay Series, as well as started a plan for a separate project that would be a two-book venture… Just hoping my publisher is loving the ideas, too!
I read man books… it totals 116 this year!
Blog tour review on 12th January
Blog Tour Review coming 18th January
Blog tour review in A Book & a Brew coming 19th January – Five star, by the way!
So This Is Christmas by Kay Bratt
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Book 11 in the Hart’s Ridge Series by Kay Bratt, and it’s another page-turner!
This story is just as good, if a little different, than the rest of the series.
We are still focussing on the Grey family; however, this time, Taylor, our usual police officer, is still incapacitated after an incident in the previous book.
The crime in question is under Deputy Shane Weaver, though he still feels he needs Taylor’s support. A quadruple homicide is the case this book is dealing with, along with Taylor and her own family’s issues.
Sensitively told and page turning, as is standard for a Hart’s Ridge novel.
Another 24th January Blog Tour one!
Another 24th January Blog tour one!
The Storyteller’s Daughter by Victoria Scott
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I always loved Victoria Scott’s books, and she’s 100% done it again with this one, the Storyteller’s Daughter!
A dual timeline story told from the points of view of Nita Bineham in the 1940s and of her great niece Beth in the present age.
Nita was a bit of an enigma during her time. She does not have the figure and looks preferred in those times, but she comes from a family of means. Her mother laments that the war has not given her daughter a chance to be presented to society, meaning less chance of a suitable match. On top of it all, fewer men are around, as they are all being called up.
Her father arranges for Nita to escape the house for a few days here and there, helping at the local paper. What was meant to be a brief break becomes a massive part of her life as she embarks on a junior reporter career.
On her deathbed, Nita requests that her great-niece, Beth, find a box in the attic with secrets for her to unfold.
This strange task comes at the perfect time for Beth, though she doesn’t realise it. Suffering the news that her marriage is about to end and that her job in the family business may not be there for her, she embarks upon an adventure. She mourns her great aunt and tries to piece clues together to solve the cryptic puzzle that Nita has left her.
Pages were turned quicker and quicker as I became absorbed in this story.
I’ve always loved dual timelines done well and throwing the war years into it, and I am hooked! The way Nita and Beth’s lives and connections come full circle kept me reading.
Fantastic story!
Many thanks to NetGalley and Boldwood Books for an ARC.
This One Life by Amanda Prowse
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Anything by Amanda Prowse is an automatic buy/read for me, and though This One Life has a different feel, it was by no means anything less than a brilliant read.
A dual timeline provides us with the current story and the background as we meet Edith-Madelaine, a young child living in the East End of London. Although she has little in her home, love surrounds her.
Fast forward to now, we meet Madelaine, the exquisitely put-together interior designer with a career to dream of, wealth, respect, and suitors she can pick, as well as a new chapter about to begin in her work and life abroad.
We are then taken back to eight years before, when Madelaine, as she now likes to be known, is facing a significant decision in her life.
Madelaine comes from a small, loving family, but expectations and disappointments remain regardless of how much her parents care for her.
It’s hard to be a woman who has it all. Amanda Prowse has sensitively explored this topic, and the lesson I learned from this story is that it is possible, but a life like that will always involve compromises.
I read it in a day, and the ending did leave me all warm and fuzzy.
Releasing 7th January 2024
Another 29th January Blog Tour read!
So, tell me what you have been reading, and what caught your eye from the above!
01 Dec 2024 1 Comment
in Reviews, Thoughts Opinions & Memories Tags: Am Reading, Arc, Blog, Blog Post, Blogger, Blogging, Book Review, Book Reviews, books, Goodreads, Netgalley, reading, romance
And November is done. That means Christmas is upon us!
This month was filled with excitement, with my book release, going back to school, observations, school craziness, and our 23rd wedding anniversary. Hubby Dearest excelled with his gift… a ReMarkable e-notebook tablet. It is so cool!
The big question is, what did I read, and did I manage to write anything?
I started the month with no ARCS, so another month to put a dent in that TBR of mine. Then I got signed up for a few tours in the next few months, so I read a mixture!
I tried very hard to write something for my next project, but if I am honest with you, school has taken over my brain, at the moment… Plus getting to grips with promoting In God’s Hands! Words will flow, soon enough!
I read 10 books, all in all.
The One Who Wrote Destiny by Nikesh Shukla
My rating: 3.5 of 5 stars
I’ve read a few of Nikesh Shukla’s books, and when I saw this was another one he had written, I was eager to read it.
I don’t know about other readers, but certain premises pull me in when reading blurbs, and the fact that this was a book about a British Indian with roots in Kenya was my hook. I guess we look for stories where we might be able to connect with the characters, and here I am, a British Indian with roots in Kenya.
Though interestingly told, the story wasn’t entirely true to that blurb, as it is 25% about Neha, that girl diagnosed with cancer who wants to delve deeper into the possibility of destiny and whether it is a thing.
The other 75% is split between the views of 3 other key characters: some set in the past, some in the present, which all add to the story’s layers.
First, it is about Mukesh, Neha’s dad, who recently arrived in the UK from Kenya, and how he settled and met Nisha, Neha’s mum.
Then comes Neha, and the discovery of her illness, and how she tries to come to terms with it,
The next is Raks, Neha’s twin brother, after her death, and how he handles his grief and last wishes.
The final segment is through the eyes of Ba, Neha and Rak’s maternal grandmother, and it focuses on a week when the children were very young after their mother had passed away.
It was a slow start, and there is much about the racism faced and the uphill struggle of the early immigrants, which is returned again and again.
I did get into it, but I don’t think I enjoyed it as much as I thought I would.
A woman gets caught up in the evil clutches of a Social Media scandal, with disappearing family members, the sudden appearance of a baby, and a threat to her life.
Some may say this is a farfetched storyline, but as the mother of teenagers, I found it shockingly real. The influence people, influencers, have on young, impressionable minds, and even those older, is immense and can be extremely negative if not checked up on.
I was fully immersed in the story, and yes, it was extreme. However, it highlights how the effects of very real influencers (I shall not name names) can alter the perceptions and thinking of large members of the public and just how bad things can get.
Misogyny, sexism, and control are all explored fantastically.
Well done, DK – I loved it!
My So-Called Bollywood Life by Nisha Sharma
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I loved this cute delve into Winnie Mehta’s life. A student, about to head to college to continue fostering her love of all things cinema, especially Bollywood, she’s also dealing with her fate, or destiny, as predicted by her family pundit.
Winnie fights with her inner Bollywood heroine as she tries to determine whether her destiny is Raj or her future is Dev.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading this, an easy read with a tasty dose of Indian masala!
The references to Bollywood films that I have watched already ignited the need to go and find them on whatever streaming service possible, so I could watch them!
Releasing 23rd January, 2025
Kiley will be joining me for a Book and a Brew in January, so I shall save my review for then, but it is another 5 stars from me. I love the Borrow A Bookshop Series!
Closest Kept by Kitty Johnson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
A very different story to the previous book, Prickly Company, which I read and enjoyed earlier this year.
Closest Kept is a story of a woman with secrets. Secrets she has kept hidden for the whole of her adult life. Secrets that keep threatening to spill.
Lily and Inga are best friends. They are artists, struggling to make a living in the big wide world, but they keep going, in the hope that one day their dreams will come true.
Both women have reasons for not trusting, but they have faith in one another.
A drunken night out introduces them to Matt and Alex, and after a quick regroup in the ladies, Inga pairs herself off with Matt, leaving Lily with Alex.
They end up in happy relationships until things happen that threaten to push Lily to tell the truth about her own childhood, especially when her little sister turns up. Oh, and also wondering whether she really got the right guy…
I was so torn for Lily. She had such an enormous burden on her, her whole life, and no-one she felt she could share with. And the feeling that you might be thinking of your best friend’s partner in the wrong way can’t be an easy situation to be in, either.
There is a lot of trauma in this.
It’s not a light-hearted read, but a very well written, solid read.
Many thanks to NetGalley and Lake Union Publishing for an ARC.
Releasing 6th May, 2025
A review will follow as I am part of the blog tour in January. 🙂
Radha and Jai’s Recipe for Romance by Nisha Sharma
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Radha is a kathak dancer who loses her will after learning something about her mother’s behaviour that could cost Radha her reputation.
Jai is a Bollywood dancer and captain of a dancing group which is lacking a choreographer.
Both end up at the same school, with similar goals but different motives.
Of course, there are family issues. (When are there not in an Indian household?) and there is romance. And food. Lots and lots of lovely food!
Lovely to read another story with loads of Bollywood and Indian cultural references, as well as get to hear about some characters from a previous book.
I enjoyed this easy read.
The Re-Write by Lizzie Damilola Blackburn
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
A great story featuring the ever-popular reality show arc as a side plot to a rocky romance.
Temi is an aspiring writer who’s struggling to get a publishing deal. To make ends meet, she ghostwrites.
Wale is her ex-boyfriend. She thought they had something special, and it meant even more to her, as a woman with generous curves, to be attractive to such a gorgeous specimen of manhood.
But something happens, causing them to split. Wale ends up on TV on a reality dating show, hopping from woman to woman, rubbing Temi’s face in the misery of their breakup.
She writes. It’s cathartic. Words that will never see the light of day.
Then she is approached to ghostwrite a memoir for a young reality TV star who wants to redeem his reputation…
Guess who it turns out to be?
I won’t go into any more story detail, but there is so much more to this story than a good-looking guy trying to make himself look better and a struggling author struggling to make a name for herself.
An enjoyable read, touching on young carers, alcoholism, parental expectations, and second-chance romances.
Many thanks to NetGalley and Penguin Books for an ARC.
Releasing February 13th, 2024
Collar Me Crazy: Heartwarming Stories of the Dogs Who Rescue Us! by Kay Bratt
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Book 2 in the new multi-author Dragonfly Cove and Dog Park series.
The series follows a litter of labrador puppies and the households who adopt them.
Kay Bratt starts the first puppy story (book 1 sets the scene) with aspiring author Emily, who finds herself dog mama to a new pup, Daisy. She’s not sure whether she can do this whole dog thing, but she somehow gets sucked into another dog-related tragedy when she meets a girl whose new puppy, bought from a pet store, dies within a week.
The story explores the awfulness of illegal dog breeding and puppy mills and a blossoming romance for Emily. Of course, we get to know the delightfully bouncy pup Daisy and meet Valor, a brave soldier of a dog.
A beautiful start to the series.
Releasing 1st January, 2025
The Favourite by Fran Littlewood
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
It’s an age-old question. Do parents have favourites?
The Favourite follows the story of three sisters, together with their families and parents, to celebrate with a fancy naming ceremony for a young child.
Here they are in an idyllic setting, in the forest, staying in a state-of-the-art glass house for a week, when something happens that raises a question in everyone’s mind: Does Dad really have a favourite?
All three women have vivid memories of their childhoods, and all three’s memories have differences.
It was an intriguing premise, but I found it a little hard to stay engaged.
Many thanks to NetGalley and Penguin Randon House for an ARC.
Releasing 12th June 2025
So, tell me what you have been reading, and what caught your eye from the above!
05 Nov 2024 Leave a comment
in Fiction, My Writing Tags: Blog, Blog Post, Blogger, Blogging, Chickpea curry lit, In God's Hands, Rishta Series
Sorry for being so tardy in my post, but yes, today is the day that book three finally came out!
Please head over to my other site to read a little more about it!

31 Oct 2024 13 Comments
in Reviews, Thoughts Opinions & Memories Tags: Am Reading, Arc, Blog, Blog Post, Blogger, Blogging, Book Review, Book Reviews, books, Goodreads, Netgalley, reading
No way has October left the building already?
Another busy one. (Yes, I know. When is the world of Ritu not busy?) School has finished for the October half-term, and I have been preparing for the release date of In God’s Hand, which is on 5th November! It is Diwali and Halloween today, so Happy Diwaloween! But, as Sikhs, we celebrate Bandi Chorr Diwas, which falls tomorrow, on 1st November. I also got diagnosed with Fibromyalgia, so there’s another interesting string to my bow.
The big question is, what did I read, and did I manage to write anything?
I started the month with one NetGalley ARC and finished it with NONE! I have been reading physical books from my TBR shelf, and it’s been great perusing my shelves to choose my next read!
I tried very hard to write something for my next project, but if I am honest with you, school has taken over my brain, at the moment. Plus I’m getting to grips with promoting In God’s Hands! Words will flow, soon enough! And, I’m having some interesting new ideas, right now, that may or may not be connected to the current series…
I read eleven books in total. Making my yearly total 97 so far!
Someone Like You by Sandy Barker
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I have a real soft spot for this series and loved jumping back onto Matchmaking Land with Poppy and her gang!
This time, matchmaker extraordinaire Poppy has to match Raff, recently crowned Britain’s Best Baker, without him knowing by one of his best friends and her co-worker, with the assistance of his other best friend, Gaby.
Matching without someone knowing is hard enough, but adding a friend discovering feelings for their friend after the matchmaking journey has begun is a whole lot more crazy.
Throughout the story, we have Poppy’s POV, and I found it lovely. She is the thread through the series, and we get to learn more about how she is getting on in life, as well as some important characters from previous books.
We have romance, friends to lovers and CHRISTMAS! What’s not to love?
It’s a fantastic addition to the series!
Many thanks to NetGalley and Boldwood Books for an ARC.
Releasing 12th November, 2024
The Ex-Mas Holidays by Zoe Allison
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I’ve wanted to read this for a while, and when I realized the second book, which is kind of linked, was due out, I sped it further up my TBR pile, and I am so glad I did!
Two exes (I’m not spoiler-ing there, it’s in the title!), Maya and Sam end up bumping into one another in a rather inopportune way, and this paves the path for an interesting set of circumstances where we see them both struggle with old feelings, new feelings and a whole load of barriers that come in their way, in the name of a girlfriend (Sam) and a father who has high aspirations (Maya).
Slow burn, lots of sizzle, dry wit and humour, and cuteness overload, and all in a snowy, Christmassy setting!
I truly adored this book, and now I cannot wait to dive into the next one, The Wedding Engagement, as I want to know what happens to the other characters in this fab read!
The Wedding Engagement: An utterly laugh-out-loud brother’s-best-friend rom-com, brand-new for 2024! by Zoe Allison
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Oh my, Zoe Allison, what spice!
I was thrilled to read The Wedding Engagement and to learn what happened to Liv and Arran, whom I had already met in her previous book, The Ex-Mas Holidays.
Liv and Arran have known each other since childhood. Arran is Liv’s twin brother’s best friend, and she’s been holding somewhat of a candle for him for a while.
Arran has not long got out of a relationship, with a broken engagement, and a gorgeous little boy, Jayce, in his life.
There is chemistry between these characters, though they both have their reasons for not taking the first step towards admitting any attraction. Then they get thrown together to help arrange the Sten do for Liv’s brother, Sam, and her best friend, Maya.
The sizzle starts and can be felt intensely, coming to an (ahem) climax in the second half of the book.
A typical friends-to-lovers story filled with slow-burn chemistry that a reader can really feel! I raced through this book in a couple of sittings and LOVED it!
Many thanks to NetGalley and HQ Digital for an ARC.
Released 8th October, 2024
Marriage & Masti by Nisha Sharma
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This is the third in the If Shakespeare Were An Auntie series, and I think this was the spiciest yet!
The third couple in the friendship circle finally gets together, as Veera and Deepak find themselves in a strange situation that crosses family and cultural expectations, as well as business aspirations.
Veera and Deepak are both best friends, and genuinely lovely people. They just can’t see beyond that friendship, and when they do, they can’t fathom the fact that the other may be feeling the same.
Loved it!
A Wish in the Wind: The Wishing Tree Series Book 17 by Kay Bratt
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I love the Wishing Tree series, and Kay Bratt’s next instalment was another feel-good story that added layers to the community stories.
Hunter Glenn has moved to the area with his daughter, Ava, to rebuild his life after his marriage broke up.
Nicole has been in Linden Falls for a while and feels optimistic about the future.
And a small slip of paper that escapes from the Wishing Tree finds its way to the right place to ensure happiness for all.
It was lovely to catch up with Neva and the rest of the residents, too.
Another feel-good story to warm the heart.
Queenie by Candice Carty-Williams
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Queenie has been sitting on my TBR pile for a while now, and I didn’t want to watch the series before reading the book.
A story with a lot of angst and confusion within the mind of the MC, Queenie, a 25-year-old black woman, working in journalism, coping with a failed relationship, and trying to work out how to live alone. She bounces from one disastrous hookup to another, damaging herself more and more as she goes.
I was compelled to read more, however one thing I don’t agree with is the constant use of the word ‘funny’ to describe this book. It is not light-hearted, or traditionally romantic, nor is it funny in a way that should be the first word to describe it. There are laugh-out-loud moments, but it’s not a comedic masterpiece.
That label, to me, seems to detract from the story being told.
Enjoyed the read, though!
The Cosy Cat Society by Charlie Lyndhurst
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I am a cat mum/nan so that title would draw me in before anything else!
The Cosy Cat Society centres around a cat sanctuary, its owner, Sacha, and several key volunteers who spend much of their time supporting a just cause.
When it becomes apparent that there is an even bigger worry about the sanctuary’s future, Sacha tries to keep it from the others until it becomes apparent that a problem shared is a problem halved.
The same goes for the rest of the volunteers, who each have their own worries that they need the help of their friends to work through.
It is a delightful read, cleverly intertwining the stories of several characters and highlighting the plight of many of our feline friends.
And there is a little romance within, too!
The kitties and I approve!
Liv Is Not A Loser by Lauren Ford
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
A new author and a promising debut.
Liv is at an age where most of her friends are settled, and here she is, still in a part-time job doing nothing much, and in her 7th year of trying to finish her degree. There is no relationship on the horizon and nowhere to live, thanks to being ceremoniously evicted with brief notice.
The story revolves around a list Liv makes with her brother, Joe, his boyfriend, Seth, and their friend, Henry, to pull her out of loser territory.
It is an easy-to-read story with a friends-to-lovers feel, including a bit of ‘will they won’t they?’ and plenty of family dynamics.
The Help by Kathryn Stockett
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I’ve had this on my TBR for a while, now, and boy, am I glad I’ve finally read it.
The Help is a fantastic story told sensitively, showing the precarious relationship between the white folk of Jackson, Mississippi, and their household help.
Told through the voices of Aibileen and Minny, two of the maids, and Miss Skeeter, a white woman who has a conscience and who wishes to find out what happened to one of her family’s own former maids, who brought her up.
I felt many emotions, reading this, from rage, to sympathy, to solidarity.
Well written and heartrending.
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Another of my TBR books was finally pulled from the shelf to read, and I was not disappointed!
A fantastically written tale of Evelyn Hugo, an ageing Hollywood siren who is ready to tell all about her life to Monique, a little-known journalist at Vivant magazine.
I loved how we were immersed in Hugo’s memories with the first-person telling of the story as she began to recount her upbringing, rise to fame, and need for fame and fortune alongside her seven husbands. There were also little chapters showing Monique’s present life situation.
Interspersed with short excerpts from newspapers and magazines, the story is strengthened as the reader is made to feel the pressure of the paparazzi on those whose lives play out in front of cameras and their heartaches at not being able to live their true lives all the time, for fear of repercussions.
From the beginning, Hugo hints at a connection between her story and Monique, the young journalist, which leaves the reader guessing what that may be.
I couldn’t put this book down, and I almost wish I had read it sooner! It lives up to the hype!
Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Another one I finally got to after what feels like years of it being on my TBR pile.
There’s been a lot of hype about Hamnet. Some reviews are mind-blowing, some are not, so I was determined not to let these other ones fill my mind before I made my mind up.
And I must say the entire premise entirely took me in.
Hamnet is a deeply fascinating tale loosely based on the story of William Shakespeare’s son, Hamnet, who passed away at 11. It gives some fabricated details to a story that does not have much background other than that Hamnet did exist; he died at eleven, and Shakespeare wrote Hamlet not long after.
I appreciated that Shakespeare’s name was not used directly in the entire book so as not to detract from the main story of that little boy and his family, the possible lead-up to his death, and their coping after.
So, tell me what you have been reading, and what caught your eye from the above!