Book previews

Out Today: New Jenny Jackson

Jenny Jackson’s first novel Pineapple Street was one of my favourite new books of 2023 and so it probably shouldn’t be a surprise that her new novel is the new release that I want to highlight this week. Per the Blurb: The Shampoo Effect is about one summer in New England, where writer Caroline arrives in Greenhead and falls for its charms and for one of it’s residents, Van Whittaker. She spends the summer with his friends, including one who is pregnant with Van’s child, and it seems that the fun will keep coming – right up until it doesn’t. I love a rich people problems story – and I’ve also had a pretty good run of summer people and year round people novels which this sounds like it is too, so I have high hopes for this – and I have it on my pile ready to go too!

Recommendsday

Recommendsday: June 2026 Quick Reviews

It’s the first of July and it’s a Wednesday and normal service is resumed after the chaos in the posting schedule at the start of June and so that means it’s Quick Reviews time! And it’s a very mixed bag of genres this month – but also in how much I liked some of them. But here we go – three more books I read last month that I haven’t already told you about.

An Untidy Death by Simon Brett

Cover of An Untidy Death

This is the second in Simon Brett’s Decluttering series. Our lead character Ellen, is a declutterer (not a cleaner) and in this one she’s called in by a daughter worried about the state of her mother’s flat. Ellen isn’t too worried – yes the flat is a mess, but Ingrid seems to know what she’s about. But then the flat burns down and Ingrid is found dead inside and Ellen isn’t so sure it’s the accident the police think it is. I read the first one last year last year and thought it was only OK but this one is in Kindle Unlimited at the moment so given how much I like most of Brett’s other series I came round to see if I liked it more than the first – and the answer is not really. The mystery itself is pretty good but the murder victim was probably the most interesting (and likeable) character in the book. I found Ellen’s family quite hard work – and that sort of bled into Ellen as well. I think I’m probably calling time on this series at this point.

Under the Milky Way by Jess K Hardy

This is a novella linked to the Bluebird Basin series our hero is Madigan’s brother Darryn, who spends Labor Day in Balsam Falls every year after visiting his brother . Hannah our heroine is newly an empty nester and is hoping to take her mind off it with a weekend at a remote cabin in Montana. Except that when she gets there, there’s already someone staying there. So they end up spending the weekend together, and find a connection between them – but can it last beyond the weekend when their lives are (literally) in different places. This is a fun quick read with two older characters finding love and figuring out how their lives fit together.

Castle in Northumbria by Lorna Hill

I am a long time fan of Lorna Hill’s Sadlers Wells series, but haven’t read as many (any?) of her other books, which were out of print when I was the right age to be reading them. They are now available through the Girls Gone By and I picked up this one – which is the fifth in the Marjorie series – a while back (actually two book cons ago!) and finally got around to reading it as part of the pre-book con clear out. And I think the problem is that I was coming in to a series with no existing relationship to any of the characters and although I usually like a kids go on a holiday story (see Swallows and Amazons) I found a lot of the characters in this really annoying! The claim to fame for the series is that it’s where Guy Charlton comes from – and obviously I’ve come across him in the Wells, and he’s much less likable in this than he was in Jane Leaves the Wells! On the bright side after reading this I went back and read two of the Wells books (including Jane leaves) and they were still good – although reading Guy across both series makes me realise that he has a bit of a thing about threatening to spank people!

And in case you missed them, the Books of the Week in June were Dolly All the Time, And Then There was the One, Receipts from the Bookshop and Star Shipped and the other Recommendsdays were Early June new releases and Pride Month.

Book of the Week, romance

Book of the Week: Dream on, Ramona Riley

Happy Tuesday, it’s book of the week day again. and I think maybe the Deanna Raybourn was my favourite-favourite last week – but that’s the eighth in the series and the given that i’s nearly the end of June and thus the end of Pride month, it’s maybe fitting that the last BotW of the month is a queer romance.

Dream On, Ramona Riley is both a small town romance and a normal person and famous person one. When Ramona’s mum ran away, teenage Ramona helped her dad with her baby sister until Ramona left for college. Then when her dad was involved in an accident, she dropped out and gave up her dreams of a career in costume design to come home and help her family again. But now Olive is about to leave for college and Ramona’s best friend wants her to give up her job in the local diner and pursue her dreams again. And it just happens that this summer there is a big budget Hollywood rom-com coming to film in town, that might give Ramona the chance to kickstart her dreams. The only problem is that one of the stars of the movie is Dylan Monroe, the actress daughter of two 90s rock stars and also Ramona’s first kiss, one magical night back when she was a teenager, and now Ramona has to teach her to waitress and other Normal People things.

I realise that that seems like it’s already quite a lot of plot, but actually it really is just the set up and there’s loads more that happens after that and I’m not spoiling anything. This has got the same sort of witty dialogue that Ashley Herring Blake’s previous series Bright Falls has – and actually in a delightful crossover between the old series and the new, the movie that is being filmed is based on one of Iris’s books. It’s got a culture clash between the small town life and the famous people one, Dyland has got a lot of issues about her upbringing that she’s working her way through and the two heroines are keeping so many secrets from each other it’s a wonder they manage to sort it all out satisfactorily at the end, but they do, and I’m almost convinced that they’re going to manage to make it work despite their very different life experiences. It’s got quite a lot of sex scenes in it – more I think than the Bright Falls series and some language in them that I don’t love, but hey, each to their own, at least nothing was described as oozing or dripping…

I’ve already got the second in this series, Get Over It, April Evans, on the shelf after my trip to Gay’s the Word, whcih was actualyl the catalyst for reading the first one, and there is a third (and maybe final?) book in the series, Take a Chance, Sasha Sinclair, coming out in September, so you never know by the end of the year I may even have read the whole series! I definitely enjoyed this one enough that I won’t delay reading the next one too long.

I bought this in Saucy Books back at the end of last summer, but I’ve seen it in a bunch of other bookshops since then too. And it’s available on Kindle and Kobo too.

Happy Reading!

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: June 22 – June 28

Well as you can see, I didn’t get any of the long runners ticked off, but also the heat was even worse than I was expecting it to be. Honestly. The office was fine – but getting there was not, and sleeping at night was terrible. I feel like I need to sleep for a couple of days to recover. Apparently this week is going to be better until we get to the weekend. Thoughts and prayers everyone…

Read:

George V by David Cannadine

The Spies of Hartlake Hall by R L Graham

Marble Hall Murders by Anthony Horowitz

They Do It With Mirrors by Agatha Christie

A Sinister Revenge by Deanna Raybourn

An Untidy Death by Simon Brett

Dream On, Ramona Riley by Ashley Herring Blake

Started:

A Taste for Murder by Matt Baker

Still reading:

Death and Other Occupational Hazards by Veronica Dapunt

Any Way the Wind Blows by Rainbow Rowell

Two ebooks bought.

Bonus picture: watching football somewhere with air conditioning…

*next to a book book title indicates that it came from NetGalley. ** indicates it was an advance copy from a source other than NetGalley.

comedy, not a book

Not A Book: Mel Brooks

Do not be confused by the name of the film – Mel Brooks is 100 today! He’s a comedy genius – and if you’ve missed how much I love the musical version of his movie The Producers, I don’t think you’ve been here much! I really wish I could find a clip that really shows you how genius the show is but I don’t think any of their showcase performances really demonstrates that, possibly because out of context some of the numbers.. well. How can you unleash Springtime for Hitler on people without the context that they’re trying to create the worst show ever seen so it closes straight away? Anyway, I think the closest is this one from the Big Night of Musicals.

I will be attempting to mark the occasion by watching that documentary I referenced at the top, and if I can’t manage that with the streaming services at my disposal, I will be watching one of his movies. And in case you were wondering, yes I am going to try and make it back to the West End version one more time before it closes in September.

Have a great Sunday – try not to melt in the heat!

bookshops

Books in the Wild: South Kensington Books

Remember in Books Incoming the other week, where I had a mad week with five books on the Tuesday and a sixth on the Wednesday? This is where the sixth book came from on my way to Rufus Wainwright. And apologies for the sign going right through the middle of the shop front – so inconsiderate of the council to put it there!

Here’s the front window – and as befits a bookshop smack bang in London’s Museum quarter, it’s a mix of fiction and books to appeal topeople coming fresh from the V&A.

Lets start just inside the door with the Bestsellers and New Fiction. Yesteryear is the top seller – which really isn’t a surprise because it’s ad so much buzz about it and there’s also the new Elizabeth Strout, which is everywhere too. In the new fiction shelves below there are a few that I’ve got on the pile too – like Births, Deaths and Marriages by Laura Barnett, The Wedding People, The Correspondent and some Christina Lauren too.

On the other side we’ve got Prisoners of Geography, which I’m sure I bought for some one at some point at the top but there’s quite a lot below that I’ve read – like Island Calling, Murder at World’s End and The Impossible Fortune – and stuff I’ve got on the pile like The Eights and Atmosphere.

As far as the rest of the shop goes, beyond the new books, they’ve got a huge selection of fiction and non fiction for £4.99. So if you’re not looking for something in particular and just want to browse for something to take a chance on without breaking the bank, this is a really good option – especially if you want non-fiction. My purchase was Constellation of Genius, as seen in last weekend’s Books Incoming, but I was very tempted by Tripped, having really enjoyed Blitzed nearly a decade (!) ago – however I have a lot of German history books already on the pile (Weimar Germany and Nazi Germany) and so I can’t really justify another one… yet.

Have a good weekend!

announcement

Heatwave

It’s hotter than Britain has any right to be and my brain has packed up and gone home to try and get cool somewhere. It’s impossible to capture in a photograph how hot it feels – and I wouldn’t subject you to my shiny red faced sweaty look either. I don’t want that committed to the internet. These were taking just after 7am when the temperature was already nearly 30. I haven’t been this hot since I was in Ghana. And the hotel in Accra had air conditioning, which my house definitely doesn’t. Normal service will be resumed when the temperature drops a bit…

Book previews

Out This Week: New Beatriz Williams

For the second week in a row, the new release is from an author where I’m a bit behind on their back catalogue. But with Beatriz Williams I have more of an excuse than Ashley Poston because her books can be much harder to get hold of over here. Her 2024 and 2025 releases still aren’t available on Kindle in the UK – which means I suspect that the hard copy versions I can see on Amazon are US editions and the only page for this new one on UK Amazon is a large print edition. Still The Beach at Summerley did arrive on Kindle eventually so fingers crossed for these latest three. Anyway, that’s an awful lot of talk without saying what this book is actually about, so here we go:

Lucy is a young widow, who returns to her family’s New England estate for the summer with her young daughter to mourn her father only to discover that the property is in a mountain of debt and the man who doomed her friendship with her teenage best friend is vacationing next door after an accident ended his NFL career. Because it’s Beatriz Williams there is also a historical element – this time about a fabled pirate treasure from the early eighteenth century. The location of Lucy’s family home is Winthrop Island which has also featured in other Williams novels so I really do feel like I need to read the back catalogue first, but if you’ve already done that (or you’re not as fussy as me about things like this!) then I think this sounds like an amazing summer holiday beach book.

LGTBQIA+, Recommendsday

Recommendsday: Pride Month 2026

It’s the last Wednesday of Pride month and so it’s time for some pride month reccs before it’s too late.

How to Fake It In Society by K J Charles

Cover of How to Fake It in Society

This was one of my purchases while writing the offers post and it was so much fun. Titus Pilcrow is a younger son who’s been making his own way in the world as a shopkeeper, right up until he marries a wealthy woman on her deathbed. Now he’s got more money than he could have dreamed of – and suddenly people are coming out of the woodwork to try and get a share of it. The Comte de Valois is one of them. Nico was courting the woman that Titus married until not long before her death – and he really needed that money. So he inveigles himself into Titus’s life to help him accustom himself to his new life – and to try and make some money out of it. Except that he finds himself liking Titus a lot more than he expected. I read this in no time at all – started it on the train to work, carried on reading it at lunchtime, then on the train home and finished it in the evening. K J Charles does a really good line in Adventurers – see also The Gentle Art of Fortune Hunting – and I love that as a trope in romances (See also The Masqueraders) and I only wish I’d been able to pace myself and made it last longer!

The Gay Best Friend by Nicolas DiDomezio

I’ve had four goes at writing the plot summary for this – and all of them have been unsatisfactory. But basically Domenic is caught in between his childhood best friend Patrick and Patrick’s fiancée Kate who is now maybe a closer friend that Patrick. Domenic is invited to both the stag do and the hen party and both Patrick and Kate want him to be on their side and report back (or lie if necessary). Domenic is also just broken up with his own fiancé and had to cancel his own wedding. Unexpectedly at the bachelor party is Bucky, a professional golfer and possibly Dom’s replacement as Patrick’s best friend – who was meant to be playing in a PGA tournament that weekend but is “injured”. I didn’t really like any of the characters much – especially not Domenic, who is A Lot. He’s living a life he doesn’t want, not at all over his childhood issues and is such a people pleasing doormat I wanted to shake him. At least 90 percent of his problems are of his own making – and add on to that that he keeps getting drunk and spilling other people’s secrets and it’s just really hard to have any sympathy with him. I’m not going to lie, I read this in an evening, but the more I think about it, the less I like it and the more it annoys me – which is a shame because I really liked the blurb for this – and also for some of DiDomizio’s other books which I’m now not sure I want to risk!

Puck by Samantha Allen*

Cover of Puck

Puck is a reality show producer on a dating show called Homewreckers, where they specialise in putting couples together and then ripping them apart again. So when the go to their college best friend Mia’s wedding to the man Puck is convinced is the wrong guy, they decide to deploy the skills from their day job to stop the wedding. The only person standing in their way is Robyn, the maid of honour and Mia’s new bestie. This is described as Midsummer Night’s Dream inspired and yes there are two couples who Puck is meddling with so that all checks out. The problem really is that Puck isn’t really very likeable and that the romantic plot for them seems shoe-horned in as a bit of an afterthought. Robyn and Puck seem to be hate banging more than anything else as they barely exchange a pleasant word with each other. I do wonder if the romance was addd to try and expand the potential readership (we romance readers sure are voracious) because the rest of the plot definitely more well developed even if I didn’t really enjoy it.

And that’s your lot – I’m sorry it’s a bit of a mixed bag in terms of whether I liked them or not, but as with so many books, your mileage may vary. The common theme between The Gay Best Friend and Puck Hard to Like Main Characters and my tolerance for that is low at the moment. But if you are better with that than me at the moment, then I think The Gay Best Friend is the one to try – it’s sort of rich people problems adjacent and Dom has at least maintained his friendships, which Puck really hasn’t.

Happy Humpday!

Book of the Week

Book of the Week: Dolly All the Time

Happy Tuesday everyone, and possibly not a surprise that I’ve picked the new Annabel Monaghan this week, but it is so fun and I enjoyed reading it so much that I couldn’t help myself.

Dolly is a problem solver. When her mum left when she was a preteen, now her family needs her and she’s 39. She’s back in her home town with her son for the summer to try and help save the family home. And that’s why, when the scion of the Whitfield family (so prominent the town is named after them) asks her to pretend to be his girlfriend after she helps him with a flat tire, she says yes. Except that the more time they spend together, the more she likes him – and the more she thinks he likes here, even though his world of galas and charity dinners is usually one she only sees when she delivers the seafood from her family store. But can Dolly bring herself to put her trust in someone else for once?

If I was doing the 50 states challenge this year, this would be the book for Rhode Island and it would not have been a hardship at all. I love a summer people and year round people clash of cultures story (it’s sort of rich people problems adjacent really isn’t it) and also a hero who can come in and make life easier for the heroine by throwing some cash around in a nice, non-skeevy way. A rich hero could be a little fraught in the current climate, but Monaghan deals with that pretty well, by making Stewart the guy who wants to pivot his family property business towards renovating historic buildings (rather than strip malls) and he’s not a billionaire so it was fine for me.

I read this in double quick time and really, really enjoyed it. It’s a satisfying romance with a great cast of characters and a lovely setting, which does some of the things I like about Pretty Woman, but without the sex work, rude sales ladies and opera! It’s not quite Nora Goes Off Script (but what is!) but I think it may be my favourite Monaghan after that.

This should also be pretty easy to get hold of – I’d preordered the paperback but it’s also on Kindle and Kobo.

Happy Reading!