Book & A Brew with Ritu and Nina Kaye @NinaKayeAuthor Stand Up Guy #BookReview #BookAndABrew #BlogTour

Today, I am so happy to have a lovely writer friend, Nina Kaye, visit my blog to talk about writing and her newest release, Stand Up Guy!


Hello, and welcome to But I Smile Anyway, Nina! Let’s get you set with a drink, first. Tea,
coffee, hot chocolate, or maybe a masala chai?

Hot chocolate, please.

If we’re going masala tea, I can offer you some homemade samosas, or a fresh batch of shortbread
cookies baked by my daughter this morning.

Ooh, the cookies, please!

Shortbread, it is then! Right, let’s get comfortable.

So, could you tell me a bit about your journey to becoming a published author, Nina?

Of course. I’ve spent most of my life as a ‘frustrated creative’ – someone who wanted to follow a
more creative path but who fell into a ‘safe’ career. I dreamt of being an author from a young age,
when I was devouring the likes of The Babysitter’s Club and Point Horror. At 17 years old, I even
flirted with writing outside the classroom when supposedly studying for my exams.
Fast forward nearly 20 years, and it was a life-changing illness that got me on the path to becoming a
serious writer. In 2014, my body essentially ‘broke’, and I spent months rehabilitating from a raft of
confusing and debilitating neurological symptoms. During this time, I turned to writing to support
my cognitive and physical rehabilitation, and the silver lining to this is that it led to me
achieving my dream of being a published author.

I’ve read all your books, Nina, and loved every one! Do you have a favourite out of the
books you have published so far?

I would say the one that’s closest to my heart is Take A Moment because it was inspired by my own
experience of living with long-term illness. It has the most personal meaning for me. From an
enjoyment perspective, I think Stand Up Guy is probably now my favourite. I got so invested in writing
the love story between Lea and Shep, and Shep (being a stand-up comedian) was such a fun
character to bring to life.

Do you have a special place where you create and write? Somewhere away from
the craziness of family?

Not really. I sometimes used to write in coffee shops, but now I do all my writing at home. I’m
quite good at filtering out background noise and distractions once I’m in the zone with writing or
editing, so I don’t need to take myself away to do it.

Romance is a genre close to my heart. What pulled you towards writing romance?

I think it was the influence of reading so many romance novels in my twenties. I hoovered up books
by Sophie Kinsella, Chrissie Manby, Lucy Robinson and others. They were so relatable and easy to
read, and I just loved the rollercoaster ride the main characters took on their path to their happy
ever after. With these books, I didn’t just find a genre I loved to read. I found one I wanted to write –
and not just for the love stories. As those of us who read and write romance know, there is so much
more to the genre. I also love creating the friendships and the banter that goes with them, the
humour and the more poignant life-defining moments. It’s a genre that sadly doesn’t get the credit it
deserves.

Let’s get back to your latest release, Stand Up Guy. I love stand-up comedy but have never been
to a festival like the Edinburgh one you based this story on. Have you been to many?

No, I haven’t, and to be honest, living on the doorstep of the Edinburgh festival, I haven’t felt the
need to. I have been to quite a number of stand-up comedy shows without the festival, though. A
couple that come to mind would be when my husband and I sat within spitting distance (quite
literally!!) of Nish Kumar, and we also met and got our picture taken with Dave Gorman. I love his
PowerPoint approach to comedy. He’s hilarious.

I really felt for Lea, who is finding life tough, with no close friends around her and a
failed relationship. Even so, inviting a stranger to live with her was quite extreme! Where did you
come up with that idea? Would you/have you ever…?

Ha ha, no, I haven’t! And you’re right, it was quite extreme and a bit of a risk, as Lea herself realised.
But that’s what’s great about fiction. You can stretch the boundaries of reality to build intrigue and a
sense of fun and provide escapism. I’m not really sure how I came up with the idea. I knew I wanted
to write a story set during the Edinburgh festival and I expect it was a light bulb moment that came
from my decision to make the ‘hero’ a stand-up comedian.

Who is your favourite stand-up comedian?
Ooh, that’s a difficult one! I don’t know if I can pick just one. Kevin Bridges is right up there, so
maybe he’s my number one. The fact that he’s Scottish and not that much younger than me means I
can relate to many of the jokes he makes, especially the ones about growing up in Scotland in the
nineties. I also love Russell Howard, Sarah Millican, Romesh Ranganathan, Nish Kumar, Sarah Pascoe,
Dave Gorman and Russell Kane. I could go on but I’ll spare you from that, and you did only ask for
one… 😉

I love to be nosy and ask this. What is next for Nina Kaye? Any sequels or new projects you can
tell us about?

I do have a new project underway, which I can’t say too much about right now, but I can confirm
that it is more Edinburgh-based romance and this time it’s a series. Well, it is for now. We’ll see
where it lands. I’m also working on a non-fiction project related to my long-term health condition,
which I hope will see the light of day within the next couple of years.

Oh, I love a series! That sounds so exciting! Nina, thank you for being here, today for such a lovely chat!

Thank you so much for having me today. 😊

The Blurb

Dumped by Instagram post. Not a whiff of a social life. Can it get any worse?

After a string of failed relationships – romantic and platonic – Lea’s had enough of watching life happen without her. When she bumps into Shep, a comedian at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in need of accommodation, it feels like destiny. And voilá – Lea now has a lodger and some company.

The two get on like a flat on fire, and Lea can’t resist falling for outgoing Shep. But she knows it’s a mistake that will cost her heart – he’s just another guy passing through, after all. And with Shep’s stand up routine edging him closer to his big break, there’s no way he’ll stick around.

Love is no laughing matter as the Fringe draws to a close. Can Lea find the confidence to step up and confess her feelings to Shep? Will he want to stay?

A feel-good, heartwarming romance for anyone desperate to break out of their shell and find their true self. Perfect for fans of Beth O’Leary, Laura Jane Williams and Miranda Dickinson.

Buy Links: 

Amazon UK
Amazon.com

My Review

Stand Up Guy by Nina Kaye
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I have hoovered up all of Nina Kaye’s books so far, and Stand Up Guy was no different.
Lea, the MC, has been dumped rather unceremoniously, and she is finding life hard with no other close friends around her.
It happens to be the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, where she lives, and a chance encounter with another person who looks down on their luck changes the projection of her life.
Shep is a comedian, trying his luck doing free shows to build his experience. But he has no support from his own family, and thanks to an emergency at his accommodation, it looks like this chance might be scuppered too.
Lea offers her spare room to the relative stranger and the developments over a short period cause all sorts of havoc in her life.
I loved this whole story. Lea is a sorry character at the beginning, but you see her develop into a great character as she increases her circle.
The side characters are great too, and bring another layer to the story.
The romance that develops is a brilliant ‘will they/ they?’ story, and I was totally on board.
A wonderful read and highly recommended.
Many thanks to Rachel’s Random Resources, NetGalley and Canelo for an ARC.

About the Author

Nina Kaye is a contemporary romance author living in Edinburgh.  She is the author of three other books for Canelo – Take a Moment, One Night in Edinburgh, and Just Like That.  She has previously been a contender for the RNA Joan Hessayson Award.

You can find out news about Nina by following her on social media.

https://twitter.com/canelo_co
https://www.instagram.com/canelo_co/
https://www.facebook.com/canelobooks
https://www.tiktok.com/@canelo_books

Book & A Brew with Ritu and @jeevanicharika @RhodaBaxter Knowing Me, Knowing You#BookReview #BookAndABrew #BlogTour

How exciting to have another Desi author to chew the fat with! Today, the lovely Jeevani Charika joins me for a Book and a Brew.

Hello, and welcome to But I Smile Anyway, Jeevani! Let’s get you set with a drink first. Tea,
coffee, hot chocolate, or maybe a masala chai?

Tea, please! Milk, no sugar.

I have a few freshly baked chocolate-coated shortbread cookies, or if you want something a
little more savoury, I have chevda!

Chocolate-coated shortbread is the best shortbread! I’ll have some of that, please.

So, could you tell me a bit about your journey to becoming a published author, Jeevani?

I wrote my first book back in the mid-2000s. I’d finished my PhD and suddenly I had
time in the evenings. We didn’t have a TV, so I started writing that book I’d always
been promising myself I’d write. It took three years for me to write it, fitting it into
the slivers of the evening after a long commute to London. That first book was about
two British Sri-Lankans. It was regular women’s fiction about their friendship and not
about their ‘otherness’ because they were Asian.
I started sending it out and got rejections (just like everyone else does!), but I got a
few handwritten notes on the standard rejection slip – you still had to send
submissions by post in those days. These notes were along the lines of ‘You can
write, but I don’t know where I’d sell this book’. (Rolling my eyes… I do know what you are talking about!) Those scraps of good feedback gave me hope.
I joined the Romantic Novelists Association’s New Writers Scheme and sent the book
in for a critique. The report I got back was super useful. Right at the end, the
reviewer said ‘You have a romcom voice crying to get out, have you thought about
writing something for fun?’. I took that advice to heart and wrote a romcom about a
white couple – Girl On The Run – and started submitting that. I got an offer from a
small US ebook publisher within about a year.

You wrote under a pen name of Rhoda Baxter, initially, before using Jeevani Charika.
What prompted the change?

When I got my contract for Girl On The Run, my publisher asked me if I was going to use a
pen name. I did my PhD on a bacterium called Rhodobacter, so I called myself Rhoda Baxter.
I wrote about ten books as Rhoda Baxter. I will probably write more.
I still wanted to write books where the main characters happen to be Sri Lankan, so I wrote
another book like that and queried agents again. (By this time I had four books traditionally
published, but still had no agent). When Girl Having a Ball was shortlisted for an RNA award I wrote out something like 20 agent submissions and sent them all out on the day the award
shortlists were announced. One agent got back to me. I met her for the first time at the
awards ceremony and she signed me the following week.
I’m getting to the point, I promise.

This is all important stuff. I think you need some more sugar. Here!

Yes please. I’d love another biscuit. Thanks.
Where was I? Oh yes. The agent. She started sending my book out and got lots of rejections
(she was incensed because someone actually said to her ‘We have a diverse author already’
as part of a discussion!). Around this time Prince Harry and Meghan Markle announced their
engagement. My agent was chatting to an editor who said they would love to work with an
author of colour to write about a woman of colour who married a prince. The problem was,
the book had to be written in just under 3 months. When my agent said this, I thought ‘Sure.
I’m up for a challenge,’ and said yes. It was a stressful few months, but Christmas At The
Palace was written at top speed and was published just before the royal wedding. They
wanted to use my real name for that book. So I was finally published as Jeevani Charika.
That very first book I wrote – the one that took 3 years to write. It was finally published in
2019 by Hera Books as A Convenient Marriage. It was shortlisted for an RNA award. I didn’t
win, but the lady who did win that category was Sue Moorcroft … who was the person who
wrote the NWS report that steered me towards romcoms! What an achievement!

How have you found the publishing industry as a Desi author? One thing I love about
your writing is that you use Desi characters, but make sure the story is not about
their ‘desi-ness’ rather use that element of them as an added masala or flavour to
the story in general.

Yes, yes! It’s something I feel strongly about. For the longest time, you didn’t see
South Asian (or any other ethnic minority) characters just being people and going
about their lives. They were always in books weighed down by the immigrant
struggle. I think society influences art, but art influences society, too. If the only
brown people you see in books and films are the stereotypical struggling immigrants,
then you are left with the impression that that’s all they can be.
In real life, brown people do things like fall in love, have family drama and solve
crimes. So why can’t you see them in the books, too?
The example I like to quote is the kids show Marrying Mum and Dad. My kids
watched that and didn’t bat an eyelid when it was ‘Marrying Mum and Mum’ or
Marrying Dad and Dad’ as it sometimes was. Partly because of this representation,
they are growing up feeling that it’s completely normal to have different
combinations of parents. This is as it should be. Art influences how we see the world
around us.
I remember, when I watched Monsoon Wedding, it blew my mind, because I finally
saw Asian people I recognised. I know people like that. I could relate to them in a
way that I couldn’t relate to the people in East is East.
I’m so glad that we are seeing more books about Asian people just being people
now. We get to fall in love, or solve crime, or have space adventures as main
characters! YES!

I’ve read most of your books, written under Jeevani Charika, and loved each and
every one! Do you have a favourite out of the books you have published so far?

Let me just shut the door so that the books can’t hear… Yes. Yes I do.
I love all the books I’ve written, but A Convenient Marriage is my favourite Jeevani
Charika book. That was the first book I read by you, too! I have a gorgeous paperback of it! It was the first book I wrote, so that makes it special, but it’s also set partly in Oxford in the 90s and the settings are drawn from my memories of my time
as a student. (Random aside – A friend from college read it and asked me if I’d
experienced some of the micro-agressions that the character faced in Oxford. I said
yes, and he said, ‘but I was there. I didn’t see that. I had to gently point out that he,
as a privately educated white boy, might have had a slightly different experience
than I, a state educated Asian kid from Yorkshire had done. Bless.)

Do you have a special place where you do all your creating and writing? Somewhere
away from the craziness of family?

I write in bed. I’ve tried writing at a desk – I get backache. Writing at the kitchen table
is just nonsense because people keep asking me for things. The only place that
seems to work is writing tucked up in bed. It’s warmer too.
When I worked full-time, I wrote for 2 hours every night once the kids were in bed.
Now that I’m freelance, I still find my best writing time is those 2 hours at night once
the kids are in bed. I seem to have trained my brain into being creative between 8
and 10pm.

You love a bit of Canva, too, don’t you? Definitely a bit of an expert, there! I’ve
watched many of your videos to see how to use certain features. Do you design your
own covers on there, or does the publisher do them?

The publishers do the covers for my traditionally published books. I make my own covers for
the self published books. I initially started learning how to use Canva because my first
couple of publishers gave me no marketing assets at all, apart from the book cover, so I had
to learn how to make some images. I gradually got hooked. I started making Canva tutorials
because I spent so much time playing with Canva for fun. I really enjoy doing it. I’ve started
making little bundles of ready made promo images for authors to use – you just drag and
drop your own book cover into it and you’re good to go.
I usually play with Canva at night, when the words have run out and I just want to make
something for fun.

Let’s get back to your latest release, Knowing Me, Knowing You. I always love a book
with some characters from previous stories making appearances, so that was great!
Did you plan for this to happen?

Knowing Me, Knowing You started with Gihan, who had a tiny part in both Playing For Love
and Picture Perfect. I had to work out why he was behaving the way he was in Picture
Perfect and then I built the story from there. I like following the stories of minor characters
in later books. In my head, these people are real, and I want to know more about them. I
also like that I get to go and check on the characters from past books as well. I know that feeling. My first novel wasn’t meant to be a series, but the side characters kept shouting to me to write their stories!

Cancer features in several ways within this story, and is something that has touched
each and every one of us, as loved ones succumb, or even us ourselves. What
prompted you to use the big C within this story?

I often write about grief. I don’t know why, but it’s something that pulls at me every single
time. The connection to cancer came partly because of the heroine (Alex)’s job. My day job
is in university IP and I used to see so many cancer detection tests and cancer treatments
come up and then never get anywhere because there was no funding to take the
investigations further. So it fit very well into the rest of the story. Also, I already knew that Gihan’s mother had died from cancer, quite quickly, because it’s mentioned in Playing For
Love (where his sister is the main character).
My books often have a touch of darkness in them, but I think that’s okay, so long as there’s
a happy ending.

Gihan is a sweetheart, honestly, but I do think Penelope may have stolen the show
as a cute little pup! Do you like to write animals into your stories?

I should write more stories with dogs. I don’t often write about animals because I’m too lazy
to do the research to find out what it’s like keeping different pets. We had pet dogs when I
was little, so I guess I could write about dogs fairly easily. We had two pet rats until this
summer, so I could write about rats, I suppose (they’re very cute and full of personality).
Maybe one day.

I love to be nosy and ask this. What is next for Jeevani Charika? Any sequels, or new
projects you can tell us about?

The next book is called The Winner Bakes It All and it’s about Mal, who runs a keto/
low carb cafe and Elodie who runs a cake shop. They disagree about more than just
carbohydrates.
The book originally had a working title of ‘Man Buns’ but I wasn’t allowed to keep
that title, which is a pity.
One fun thing about writing about a guy who cooks keto food is that I was able to
mention the use of the ketogenic diet to control epilepsy. I’m mum to a keto kid, so I
know how lonely it is to be the mum that has to feed her kid specific foods that go
completely against the dietary advice we’ve been given all our lives. If the book helps
someone feel less alone in their daily measuring and calculating fat and carb ratios,
then that can only be a good thing.

That sounds really interesting, Jeev! I can’t wait to read it!

Right, looks like the biscuits are finished. We got through those fast! Thank you so much for coming over, today. It has been a pleasure. 😊

Thank you so much for having me today. 😊

The Blurb

Don’t miss this uplifting second-chance enemies-to-lovers romance from the author of RNA award-shortlisted Playing for Love! ❤️

Five years ago, Alex met the man of her dreams on New Year’s Eve – but he never called. Years later, and after a string of failed relationships, she’s given up on men and accepted that ‘New Year’s Eve Guy’ will always be the one who got away.

Until the day he turns up in her office – a management consultant tasked with ‘streamlining’ the company. New Year’s Eve Guy – Gihan – might shut down Alex’s team!

Gihan is as just as gorgeous as Alex remembers, and she swears there’s still a connection between them. As she gets to know the real Gihan, will sparks continue to fly – or will Alex have to accept that the man she knew as New Year’s Eve Guy was never real to start with?

Tropes:
❤️❤️Second chance love
💼 Office romance
⚔️Enemies to lovers
🏡Small town
🐶Cute dog friend!

Knowing Me Knowing You – https://books2read.com/KMKY

A Convenient Marriage – https://books2read.com/AConvenientMarriage

Christmas At The Palace – www.books2read.com/u/38g8aa

Girl On The Run (Rhoda Baxter) – https://books2read.com/mlKGaZ

My Review

Knowing Me Knowing You by Jeevani Charika
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Alex is a little unlucky in relationships. She seems to fall, a little too quickly, in love, and that can scare off a guy. After a particularly harsh break-up, one New Year’s Eve, she meets the perfect stranger, and after sharing some special moments, she never hears from him again.
Until five years later, when he turns up. At her workplace. With a high chance that he might recommend she be made redundant.
Gihan, the man in question, is a good guy, though. So many misunderstandings, both five years ago and during the course of a couple of months in the present, mean that he is not always shown in the best light to her.
It’s not so much enemies to lovers as misunderstood yearnings and missed chances.
There are references to cancer throughout which are dealt with sensitivity.
I love a bit of contemporary fiction that has South Asian representation in it, and Jeevani Charika does this well. She incorporates a little background and culture through the book while not making it about that very same thing. We see Gihan as a regular human, but also an insight into his cultural background. I especially liked the scene when he goes to the temple. I felt the serenity he felt.
This book continues the story of a side character from previous novels of the author, Picture Perfect, and Playing for Love; however, it is a standalone and can be read as such. I enjoy reading stories that have characters from other books intertwined within, as we see the progression of other familiar faces, as well as the story in hand.
A lovely read.

About the Author

Jeevani Charika is an award-nominated writer of multicultural women’s fiction and romcoms. She also writes under the pen name Rhoda Baxter. Her books have been shortlisted for various awards. One of these days, she’ll actually win one.Jeevani is British-Sri Lankan. She loves all things science geeky. She also loves cake, crochet and playing with Lego. You can find out more about her (and get a free book!) on her website. www.jeevanicharika.com

You can find out news about Jeevani by following her on social media.

Website: www.jeevanicharika.com

YouTube Playlist: http://bit.ly/canva4authors

instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jeevanicharika/



Word Of The Year – 2024 edition! #WOTY Balance

Another new year has arrived.

Hello, 2024.

And wishing you all a Happy New Year, too!

I’ll keep it a teeny bit subdued, as when I get excited about something at the start, things have a tendency to nosedive…

It’s been quite a year, hasn’t it? We end with awful atrocities still happening in Ukraine, the awful war between Hamas and Israel, tearing Gaza apart, and poverty on the increase in so many places as the cost of living has soared.

We had the new King’s coronation here in the UK in May, too. Another historic event.

Personally, things have been up and down. I had the release of my second book, Straight As A Jalebi, which was wonderful. I visited the London Book Fair for the first time, and to be surrounded by so many like-minded folks was unreal. I got to meet my publishers, face to face, for the first time, too!

My brother visited with my Finndian family and we had such fun! My best friend finally came to stay with her daughter, too, which was a long overdue visit.

Lil Man passed his A-Levels with fantastic grades and started his new job and apprenticeship.

But, along with lots of fun, we had dark patches. Some lasting longer than others. It’s not something I will go into here, but I will say that I would never wish that kind of time on any parent, ever. Thankfully, things are looking brighter, and hopefully, they will continue increasing.

As a result of the hardships, I barely wrote. Reading and books were my solace for a long time, as we battled through.

Now, 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!
  • 2023 – I chose the word STRENGTH. I started with a different thought in my mind, regarding the meaning of that word. Reaching the end of this year, I know I have gained strength, but in ways I never thought I would be tested.

So, last year I centred my Word Of The Year aspirations on these five things.

  • Build my strength up physically, as I know that will help me as I enter that middle-aged time of life.

I started off so well… I trained for a short while, daily, with a plan created by (not so) Lil Man, so I could build my core strength up. Then, I got ill and never quite got back to it. Oops!

  • Have the strength to face all the ups and downs that will come because that is life.

I think I get the crown for this one. I am not sure I have ever lived the rollercoaster of emotions that we faced as a family, this year… But I am still standing, and currently, we are in a good place!

  • Be strong for my family and have the strength to fight for what is right for them, not the rest of the world.

This one, I 100% did, and will continue to do. I have to be there for my children and the best decisions for them. And I have pushed for everything to make things right for them.

  • Build my community around me, be it my physical friends and family or my online ones, as there is strength in numbers.

I think this one has worked too, as even though my blogging calmed down considerably after August due to circumstances out of my control, the blogily I have around me kept in touch with me and helped me through a tough time. And building numbers? Well, yes, that happened too, as SM changed, and Twitter went to X, we got Threads and Blue Sky… plus I made more and more firm friends through my publisher and groups on Facebook.

  • Ensure I keep the strength in myself so that I never lose myself under the demands of my life.

This is a big one. We faced some awful situations as a family, this year, and one of the reasons I stepped back from regular blogging was to ensure I didn’t lose myself. Because if I did that, I wouldn’t have been able to cope with the needs of others, and I wouldn’t have been strong enough to cope with everything

So, which word do I add to my list for 2024?

I thought long and hard and came up with this:

Balance

  • Create balance within our home life
  • Balance my work/home life to leave time for my writing
  • Balance time for myself along with time for others

And with this post, off I go to start that new year, filled with Self, Belief, Hope, creation, strength and BALANCE!

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!

Twas The Morning Of Christmas

Twas the morning of Christmas
And all through the house
One creature was zooming
But not after a mouse
Sonu Singh stared at the presents with glee
“I wonder which wrapped up box is for me?”

The teens still lay, sleeping,
And Daddy, too
“Well, kitty,” said Mummy, “it’s just me and you.”
She scritched his head, and he settled beside her
The only sound audible, his gentle purr

Enjoying the calm before the madness
A book and a cuppa, Christmas morn gladness
She sat and reflected on Chrismases past
When the the kids rose early,
Presents unwrapped fast

“They’re growing older, and so are we,”
She took a sip from her mug of tea
Then, from a bedroom she heard a creak
Teen 1 descended, placed a kiss on her cheek.

A gruff Merry Christmas then off for some food
The first meal of many, she felt the festive mood
Slowly but surely the rest awoke
Gathered together, softly, she spoke,

“It’s a time for family, love and giving,
Time to remember those gone, and those living.
Enjoy your presents, the food, with pleasure
And be grateful we’re all sat, together.”

And those wishes extend to all of you reading, too
I only wish for the best for you
May your stockings be full, wishes granted, I pray
Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good day!

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