books, books on offer, Recommendsday

Recommendsday: July Kindle Offers

I’m back with the most expensive post of the month – as it’s a rare month when I manage to write this without buying books myself. But I’ll give it a go – hang around until the end and I’ll let you know how I get on!

As usual, lets start with the former books of the week that are on offer. At 99p there’s Emily Henry’s Happy Place, which is last year’s release and thus just out in paperback. Also on offer because the author has a new book out is Ali Hazelwood’s The Love Hypothesis – and at this point Hazelwood seems to have a book at 99p every month, so you just have to wait long enough for the one you want to come around. I’m still waiting to get my hands on the new Christina Lauren, but The Unhoneymooners is on offer at the moment – this is an enemies to lovers, forced proximity romance– where food poisoning in the bridal party sees the bride’s twin sister go on the honeymoon with the best man – who happens to be her nemesis.

A much more recent release is How To End a Love Story – and I stand by my reservations about one aspect of this one, but it is a pretty good summer read. And The Lifeline, Libby Page’s sequel to The Lido which I read on our holiday in April is also 99p. And Iris Kelly Doesn’t Date, the last book in the Bright Falls series by Ashley Herring Blake is 99p as well.

I’m really trying not to be annoyed about this considering I went out and bought the hardback on release day, but the final Maisie Dobbs The Comfort of Ghosts is down to £2.99 at the moment. This was my favourite book I read last month and is a lovely ending to the series, but as usual you’ll probably want to have read the others to get the most out of it.

On the non-fiction from Tara Westover’s Educated is 99p – it’s a few years now since I read this one, but it has really stuck with me because Tara’s childhood is so awful and she has overcome so much. Something I read much more recently is Nick de Semleyn‘s The Last Action Heroes about the stars of the blockbuster action movies of the 80s and 90s -if you liked the Arnold Schwarzenegger documentary on Netflix, then you’ll be interested in this. And if you want some history, Lucy Worsley’s Jane Austen at Home is 99p too.

I still haven’t watched the new series of Bridgerton, but the book that inspired it Romancing Mr Bridgerton is on offer this month – all the usual caveats about the differences between the twenty-plus year old source material and the adaptation.

This month’s Terry Pratchett is The Fifth Elephant, which is £1.99 and is in the fifth book in the City Watch sub-series of the Discworld books. The Science of Discworld III is also 99p at the moment too. The Georgette Heyer is one of my favourites – Sylvester – and not quite as cheap, but Have His Carcase aka Peter and Harriet 2 is the Peter Wimsey.

Happy Wednesday!

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: July 1 – July 7

Well that was quite a week. I’m still not sure if I’m coming g or going. And my brain has been pretty fried so I think that explains the descent into binge-reading of Patti Benning mini-mysteries. I wish I could say what I’m going to do tomorrow, but I don’t know yet and I’m hoping inspiration will come to me at some point.

Read:

Welcome to Glorious Tuga by Francesca Segal*

These Old Shades by Georgette Heyer

Jackie by Dawn Tripp*

Curried Lobster Murder by Patti Benning

Creamy Casserole Murder by Patti Benning

Grilled Rye Murder by Patti Benning

A Quiche to Die for by Patti Benning

A Side of Murder by Patti Benning

Started:

The Way We All Became The Brady Bunch by Kimberley Potts

Seven Lively Suspects by Katy Watson*

Still reading:

The Unforgettable Loretta, Darling by Katherine Blake*

No books bought!

Bonus picture: Tuesday night watching John Lloyd Young sing.

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

books, stats

June Stats

Books read this month: 36*

New books: 31

Re-reads: 5 (all audiobooks)

Books from the to-read pile: 12

NetGalley books read: 3

Kindle Unlimited read: 12

Ebooks: 4

Audiobooks: 5

Non-fiction books: 3

Favourite book this month: The Comfort of Ghosts

Most read author: Patti Benning

Books bought: Three book-books, four ebooks and two pre-orders

Books read in 2024: 208

Books on the Goodreads to-read shelf (I don’t have copies of all of these!): 736

A pretty solid month of reading all in all. Not as much from the NetGalley list as I should have done, but more from the to-read pile than some months so swings and roundabouts.

Bonus picture: Regents Park on a summer evening. Lovely stuff.

*includes some short stories/novellas/comics/graphic novels – including 2 this month!

Book of the Week, books, new releases

Book of the Week: Welcome to Glorious Tuga

For the second week in a row, I’m writing about a book that I finished on Monday. But it was one of two books I finished on Monday, so that gives a bit of a sense of how close to the end I was, and how hopping around my reading was last week. It’s also out this very day in the US (it came out here last month) so it’s also relatively well timed. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it!

Tuga is a remote island in the South Atlantic, only accessible by boat at certain times of year. On the last boat in this season are Charlotte Walker, on her way to study the island’s tortoises, and Dan Zekri, on his was home to take over from his uncle as the island’s chief medical officer. What follows is a year in the life of the key characters on the island – full of ups and downs and a huge learning experience for Charlotte.

I really enjoyed this – it’s gentler than I expected but also all the characters felt very well rounded and fully formed, not just Charlotte and Dan. And this is also the first in a trilogy, which I only realised after I finished it and is good news because I wanted more! I’m trying to think of comparison books – but struggling a lot. It may yet come to me, but everything I’ve thought of so far had a lot of “it’s like one thing that this book does, but not like any of the rest of it” so I don’t think they work! And it’s so new that the Good Reads suggestions are still other new releases which doesn’t help either!

I mentioned Welcome to Glorious Tuga in my Summer of Not Sequels post and as I predicted in that I have already seen it about a lot this summer – at the airports and in the bookshops. My copy came from NetGalley, but you can buy it now in all the usual formats like Kindle and Kobo as well.

Happy Reading!

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: June 24 – June 30

Not the longest list this week – but some of the stuff I didn’t finish is quite long. Also the Euros are on and there was Formula One and MotoGP at the weekend. And the Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders documentary on Netflix… and that’s all before you get to the wonderful weather!

Read:

A Nobleman’s Guide to Seducing a Scoundrel by K J Charles

A Murder at the Movies by Ellie Alexander

Spicy Lasagne Murder by Patti Benning

Men at Arms by Terry Pratchett

Garden Vegetable Murder by Patti Benning

Career Novels for Girls by Kay Clifford

Started:

Jackie by Dawn Tripp*

Still reading:

Welcome to Glorious Tuga by Francesca Segal*

The Unforgettable Loretta, Darling by Katherine Blake*

No books bought!

Bonus picture: London in the sunshine.

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

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: June 17 – June 23

It seems like we might have brought some summery weather home with us from Gran Canaria! And considering I was back at work from Tuesday, I’m actually pretty pleased with this list of reading last week. All I need to do now is get the hammock set up in the back garden ready for some quality reading time in the sunny weather.

Read:

Lumberjanes Vol 19 by Shannon Watters et al

The Comfort of Ghosts by Jacqueline Winspear

Hearty Homestyle Murder by Patti Benning

Young Bloomsbury by Nino Strachey

Lumberjanes Vol 20 by Shannon Watters et al

Honey BBQ Murder by Patti Benning

Guards! Guards! by Terry Pratchett

Beef Brisket Murder by Patti Benning

Started:

A Nobleman’s Guide to Seducing a Scoundrel by K J Charles

A Murder at the Movies by Ellie Alexander

Still reading:

Welcome to Glorious Tuga by Francesca Segal*

The Unforgettable Loretta, Darling by Katherine Blake*

One ebook bought

Bonus picture: Saturday afternoon in the countryside. There is a boules tournament going on just out of shot, which is less quintessentially British, but this view just made me thing of Constable paintings for some reason.

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

Book previews, books

Another bumper release week!

This is another mega week of new books ahead of the summer – I don’t think it’s quite as big a week as the first one of the month, but it’s pretty mega.

Firstly two of my anticipated not sequels post are out – Kirsty Greenwood’s Love of my Afterlife and the new Kevin Kwan. But as the popularity of sports romances increases there’s also a Wimbledon-set Tennis romance Match Point by Katherine Reilly which comes just a couple of weeks before the tournament in SW19 and the same week as the new Roger Federer documentary…

Over in cozy crime corner, Ellie Alexander is starting a new series – with the first two out on the same day. I had an advance copy of Body in the Bookstore – and I’ve read it – and now I have the second, A Murder at the Movies, thanks to the wonders of Kindle Unlimited are both out this week. In historical mysteries there is The Stranger’s Companion which is set on the Channel Island of Sark and A Curtain Twitcher’s Book of Murder which is set in the 1960s

And that’s just the ones on my (virtual pile)! So have a great Thursday everyone, try not to buy too many books…

Book of the Week, books

Book of the Week: The Formula

As I said yesterday, in a rare turn of events, I read all of the physical books I took on holiday with me, and this was one of them – an airport sized paperback version in case you can’t tell from the photo.

This is a potted history of how Formula One came to its current moment – massively popular and finally breaking America for the first time, in part thanks to the Netflix series Drive to Survive. This takes you through the many evolutions of the sport, to explain how the sport evolved into the sport-entertainment behemoth that it is today. The authors are journalists from the Wall Street Journal – who have previously broken down (in book form) the global success of the English Premier League. This is not a history of who won what and when – it’s a look at the evolution of the sport, the key characters and moments and particularly the business of F1.

Now regular readers will know that I’m a big motorsports fan, and Formula One is the series that I’ve been watching the longest* and I know a fair bit about it because I live with a massive petrol head who has been a subscriber to F1 Racing/GP Racing for about 20 years. I’ve watched with interest over the last few years the changes that have happened in the sport since Bernie Ecclestone was deposed from his throne as puppet master in Chief and new fans have arrived in the sport – including my own sister, who despite growing up in the same household as me, has never previously been interested in the sport – and still doesn’t watch the races, she just watches Drive to Survive when it comes out.

And this is a book aimed at fans like my sister (although maybe not my sister, because she’s heard me tell some of these stories before!), who are new to the sport and want to understand a bit more of the history and the personalities. I didn’t learn a lot that I didn’t already know, but I wasn’t expecting to – and it was all put together incredibly well and in a really readable way. I was interested in what stayed in and what got left out – I’m not sure Graham Hill got a mention, and neither really did the trend of the driver pool becoming ever more dominated by sons of previous drivers.

But that’s not what this book is here to do – it’s going to talk you through how the sport started, how Bernie Ecclestone took control of it and made himself a billionaire, the geniuses who have designed the cars that changed the sport – and how it all came together at the perfect moment when the series of Drive to Survive covering the 2019 season hit Netflix just before Covid hit and the world shut down. It briefly touches on the way fears that some people have about the Netflix-isation of the sport, but doesn’t go into the realms of speculation about what might happen next – for which I am thankful!

Him Indoors hasn’t read it yet – and I await his verdict when he does, because he knows the history more than I do and will undoubtedly spot some errors – but the only glaring one I spotted was late on when they described the famously Finnish Valtteri Bottas as Estonian – which given how his most famous Drive to Survive moment is probably the one where he’s naked in a Sauna (and he’s posted another Sauna videos on Instagram just three days ago as I write this) and he’s the latest in a long line of Finnish F1 drivers (many of them quirky) and Estonia to my knowledge has never had an F1 driver is a bit of a howler, but I’ll forgive them (as long as they fix it in the paperback!)

My copy came from the airport bookshop, but it’s out now in hardback if you’re not at the airport – my hometown Waterstones has click and collect copies available so you should find it pretty easily – as well as on Kindle and Kobo.

*I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, the three things I watched on TV with my dad when I was little were Formula One, Star Trek: The Next Generation and Worzel Gummidge. How many episodes of Worzel we actually watched I don’t know, but it stuck in my head. The other two, we watched a lot.

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: June 10 – June 16

So we’ve been on holiday! A week in the sunshine means I’ve read a lot of books – and I finished Travellers in the Third Reich!!! All it took was (another) holiday and I got it done. And it is very good – the only reason it’s taken so long is because it’s long and a tough subject. Anyway, my other major holiday achievement was that I finished all three of the actual books I took with me – one from home and two that I bought at the airport. I think this is the first time this has ever happened.

Read:

The Aviator’s Wife by Melanie Benjamin

Thai Coconut Murder by Patti Benning

Tomato Basil Murder by Patti Benning

Travellers in the Third Reich by Julia Boyd

The Formula by Joshua Robinson and Jonathan Clegg

The Sweetheart List by Jill Shalvis

Murder at the Monastery by Rev Richard Coles

The Bright Spot by Jill Shalvis

One Last Summer by Kate Spencer*

Started:

The Unforgettable Loretta, Darling by Katherine Blake*

Welcome to Glorious Tuga by Francesca Segal*

Still reading:

The Comfort of Ghosts by Jacqueline Winspear

One ebook bought

Bonus picture: A scene from our holiday hike. That’s me striding away from the camera on my way to the bottom of the giant rock. And it might look flat here, but this is the plateau after a bit of a steep climb!

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

books, The pile

Books Incoming mid-June edition

An eclectic selection this month. There are two Lumberjanes that I somehow didn’t get when they first came out, the two books I bought on the way to Lagos, the first Cesare Aldo which I ordered second hand after reading the first on holiday in April, a non-Maisie Jacqueline Winspear and a Lauren Willig that I preordered ages ago and seems to have only just become available in paperback in the UK.

And what I realised after I took this photo is that – despite the fact that there is one Winspear in here so it should have jogged my memory, I forgot to include the final Maisie Dobbs in it. Now is that because I genuinely forgot or because my brain didn’t want to admit that I’d walked down to Waterstones Piccadilly on release day to buy it – and it a hardback at full price too. Thank goodness for a £10 Waterstones loyalty card reward. Even if that means I’ve already spent a lot of money there. And it’s not even the only bookshop I use…