Happy Tuesday everyone, and as I mentioned in last week’s BotW post that this was in Kindle Unlimited at the moment, I don’t think it’s going to be a massive surprise to you that I’ve picked this for my BotW today, taking full advantage of the fact that even though Hattie Steals the Show was one of my favourite books of last year it wasn’t actually a Book of the Week – it was in a Recommendsday, so I’m not really breaking any rules even though that Recommensday was only in October!

Hattie is a stage manager, who’s currently cobbling together a living by teaching wannabe stage managers and behind the scenes workers and also working at the Tavistock, a theatre behind a pub. The Tavistock’s long time patron has just died, and the artistic director is trying to keep the theatre going by staging a Shakespeare play directed by a buzzy avant garde director. There’s a valuable mask in the mix as well as conflict between the artistic team – but all that pales in comparison to the dead actress that Hattie finds in the dressing room. As the stage manager is the designated problem solver of a production crew, Hattie finds herself investigating while still trying to keep the show on track to open on time.
The mystery is good and has enough twists and turns to keep you guessing. And I really, really love all the backstage information that Patrick Gleeson has put into this. As you all know, I go to the theatre a lot but I’m not in any way an actress and the closest I’ve got to being in an actual production of anything was when I played clarinet in the school musical version of Cabaret in my first year of secondary school and was the prompter for the university pantomime in my final year, which is to say I know next to nothing about this and am delighted to be learning a bit more about it. There’s lots of detail here – but it’s neatly woven in and not info dumped to you in the narrative.
This is the first book in the series, so I’m reading out of order – and I know what the issue is in Hattie’s background that means that she’s wary of the police and perhaps not getting the work that she would like. But if you were reading this first you wouldn’t and I think you might find that a little perplexing – however the reveal in book two is worth it. I’m really glad that I discovered this series and I’m not sure I would have done if I hadn’t found it in the Notting Hill Bookshop last autumn because sometimes you need a smaller, curated selection of books to discover something new rather than a massive shop where you can get overwhelmed and end up just looking for stuff that you already know that you want to read.
This is in Kindle Unlimited and suprisingly it is still available on Kobo. And even better is the fact that Waterstones say they have stock of both this and the second book in all of their central London stores so hopefully you should be able to find physical copies in stores fairly easily.
Happy Reading!















