books

Book of the Week: The Other Side of Disappearing

A new release pick this week and I think if you saw it on the list last week you might have predicted this because I do love Kate Clayborn.

The heroine of The Other Side of Disappearing is Jess. She’s been bringing up her half sister Tegan on her own for the last decade, since their mum ran off with a boyfriend she had only know for a few months. She’s also been keeping a secret – that her mum’s boyfriend was a con man who was the subject of a true crime podcast. At the start of the book she discovers that not only has Tegan worked out the secret, but she’s contacted the podcast’s producers and is planning to go and search for their mother. Jess isn’t going to let Tegan face whatever is out there without her, so she joins her on the road trip with the podcast host and her producer Adam. Adam is a former college football star and recent journalism graduate. He’s working on this podcast for reasons of his own, but when he meets Jess he has to rethink what he has planned.

This is a road trip book, but with a larger cast than you usually get on road trip romances. And it is still a romance, but this is probably edging closer to what you might call Women’s Fiction than Clayborn has before. Because as well as being the story of Jess and Adam it’s also about Jess and Tegan and their relationship, the way they have built their own sort of family together – and the damage that their mother’s disappearance has done to them. But now I’ve written that I realise that I’ve made it sound like it’s a sad and miserable book, but it’s not! It’s actually pretty uplifting and as well as the romance you’re dying to know what happened to the con man and if they’re going to find their mum. So that’s a romance, a mystery, a road trip and a side of self discovery. It’s a really lovely read.

My copy of The Other Side of Disappearing came from NetGalley, but it’s out now in Kindle and Kobo and I can see copies available for Click and Collect in most of the central London Waterstones stores too.

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: April 1 – April 7

Well well well. I actually finished a non-fiction book in a reasonable time frame. Who knew I could do that? Certainly not the long runners list recently. Anyway, reading that and trying to make some more progress on that long running list along with a fun evening trip to a concert dominated my efforts this week. Let’s see if I can actually get the list shorter this week…

Read:

Death at the Dolphin by Ngaio Marsh

The Other Side of Disappearing by Kate Clayborn*

A Clutch of Constables by Ngaio Marsh

Mud, Muck and Dead Things by Ann Granger

Sabotaged in South Carolina by Patti Benning

Hitchin’ Up by Patti Benning

Agatha Christie by Lucy Worsley

Started:

The Breakup Tour by Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka

Still reading:

How to End a Love Story by Yulin Kuang*

The Lantern’s Dance by Laurie R King

Iris Kelly Doesn’t Date by Ashley Herring Blake

Travellers in the Third Reich by Julia Boyd

Well I wrote the Kindle offers post so there were a few…

Bonus picture: the clocks have changed, the evenings are lighter and hopefully soon the mornings will be too when I’m getting up for the train. It definitely feels less awful being up before 6am when it’s light already!

*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

Not a Book: The Time Machine

Just a quick one for this Sunday and I wasn’t actually going to write about this one because the tour is about to end, and I wasn’t sure whether there was any point in writing about it if you couldn’t go and see it – but in exciting news, it’s available on streaming, so I can write about it after all!

So this is a (self confessed) loose adaptation of HG Well’s sci fi classic The Time Machine. And in case you couldn’t tell from the trailer, it’s a comedy. And boy is it comic. It’s bonkers and really quite meta. And actually on the night that we saw it even more meta than usual with the addition of an understudy – complete with script in hand – that I still wasn’t sure if it was part of the plot until I went and googled at half time and found the reviews which clearly stated that it wasn’t normal! But it tells you a little bit about the nature of the thing that I wasn’t sure whether it was a fake-out or not*.

Anyway, if you like your casts small, your productions lo-fi and for both of those things to be a feature in the actual show, then this is great fun. I laughed a lot. Not Mischief Theatre or Spymonkey levels of laughter (where your sides actually ache), but quite a lot. Definitely more than I’ve laughed at a lot of other comedies over the last couple of years. Some of that is the writing, but a lot of it is the performers – who throw themselves at it body and soul – as I’ve mentioned, the line between reality and acting is very blurry here and that’s a good performance thing more than anything else I think.

And if still you don’t believe me that it’s good, it’s actually got an Olivier Award nomination for Outstanding Achievement in Affiliate theatre this year. I haven’t seen any of the other nominees, so I’m rooting for this one. And if it does win, maybe it’ll get some more tour dates. In the meantime, you can rent it via Original Theatre’s website and take a look for yourself. It took a bit of digging about on the website, but it’s £5.99 for a 48 rental, or £8.99 for a month’s access to all their shows, which includes the Adrian Lukis Being Mr Wickham which I keep hearing good things about, and several interesting looking plays.

Have a great Sunday everyone.

*Unlike at Spymonkey where I knew that Stephan was really dead, and Petra genuinely in Vegas, which the people around us weren’t convinced about at the interval and were hoping they’d turn up in the second half!

book related, books, bookshops

Bookshop Visit: The Hedgehog Bookshop, Penrith

Were we in the north recently? Did I find a bookshop to visit? Did I make a purchase? Yes on all counts. And it was a delightful bookshop so of course I’m writing about it!

The Hedgehog Bookshop has two floors of lovely books and goodies. The first floor has kids books and stationery and all that sort of thing. But upstairs is where the good stuff is on a book front from my point of view.

In one room there’s a nice comfy sofa with a hedgehog cushion where you can sit and peruse your choice from what seemed like a very thoughtfully curated selection of fiction, with something for practically anyone I would have thought.

There are best sellers, BookTok picks, recent top sellers, modern classics, evergreen picks and a big old selection of crime and mystery of various types. This was not the only crime bookshelf…

And in the other room there’s an eclectic mix of non-fiction, again with something for pretty much anyone across history, celebrity memoir, cookery, the whole lot.

My purchase was a book about the history of cathedral architecture which you could see in the bonus books incoming the other week. Have a great weekend.

books, stats

March Stats

Books read this month: 33*

New books: 24

Re-reads: 9 (all audiobooks)

Books from the to-read pile: 8

NetGalley books read: 2

Kindle Unlimited read: 12

Ebooks: 2

Audiobooks: 9

Non-fiction books: 2

Favourite book this month: When Grumpy Met Sunshine, I think.

Most read author: Ngaio Marsh or Patti Benning – not sure which gets more on the page count – there are more Patti Bennings but they are all 100 pages or so, the Alleyn books are longer

Books bought: 10 books across ebooks and physical books and three pre-orders

Books read in 2024: 107

Books on the Goodreads to-read shelf (I don’t have copies of all of these!): 740

The Patti Benning novellas are just so easy to read and there are so many of them that it’s easy just to go straight on from one to the next and ignore the other stuff on the pile. Still I guess it means that I’m getting value for money out of my Kindle Unlimited subscription right?

Bonus picture: two books behind on the beat-the-to-read pile bookshelf, but I’m still confident…

*includes some short stories/novellas/comics/graphic novels – including 13 this month! All those Patti Benning novellas plus one graphic novel.

Book previews, books

Out today: The Husbands

Before you ask, I haven’t read this, but I have started to see this every where which is why I’m mentioning it today. This is a debut novel, with a heroine who realises her attic is creating an endless supply of husbands for her to try out. But how do you decide whether to stick with the one you have or keep going to see if you can find a better option? This has blurbs from Marian Keyes and Gabriele Zevin and is being comped with Really Good, Actually – so if you’re looking for a book at the airport in the near future and liked Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow this could be the one to pick!

books

Recommendsday: March Quick Reviews

Now I’m not going to lie, this is a bit of a mixed bunch this month – I’ve written about all the stuff I’ve really loved and that was standalone, and then there was a lot of serials/series novellas. So this is less other things I have enjoyed, more other things I have read. But some months are like that aren’t they.

The Last Action heroes by Nick de Semlyen

You may recognise this from the long runners list, as I started it while we were on holiday – it was one of Him Indoors’ holiday books, although I was the only one who read it! I read de Semlyen’s Wild and Crazy Guys on a previous holiday and really enjoyed it so picked up this look at the action heroes of the 80s and 90s. And it’s good – I don’t think it’s as good as Wild and Crazy Guys, but maybe that’s because I’m more interested in the comedians than I am in the movie tough guys. Anyway, this took a while to read because a) it’s a large format paperback and a bit unwieldy to take around with you and b) because I get distracted by fiction and series – not because it’s not good.

Antique’s Hunter’s Guide to Murder by C L Miller*

This is a debut novel by an antiques expert and is about a former antiques hunter investigating a suspicious death. I really liked the idea behind this – I was expecting a murder mystery with maybe a bit of adventure/chase thrown in – but the actual reality is not as much fun as that, and not as readable either. I think that it was just trying to do too many things and not executing any of them particularly well. The narrative switches around between so many people that you never really get a chance to get to know anyone, and it’s all a little muddled and underdeveloped. The wealth of expert knowledge the author has about antiques didn’t counteract the issues with the actual plot and pacing. There is already a second book up on Amazon (although not on goodreads) so some of the too-much may be to do with the fact that it’s setting up for a series, so that explains a bit of the too-muchness, but it didn’t help when I was reading it!

Ricky at the Riding School by Patricia Baldwin

This one is so terrible and I don’t have a picture (and left it in Portugal) so I’m giving you cats instead. This is an evangelical pony book (yes that’s a thing) and it’s so bad it’s not even amusing. I’ve read a lot of career books and a few evangelical ones at that, and I’ve always understood that the trick is to make the heroine seem likeable and aspirational to make the reader want to be the secretary/nurse/kennelmaid/new convert to Jesus. Well this doesn’t bother with that. The heroine is awful, the potential boyfriend who introduces her to God is awful and it’s just generally fairly unreadable. And I don’t say that lightly because I have read some terribly written Girl’s Own stuff over the years – including the Elinor Brent Dyer Geography readers! Baldwin is capable of (slightly) better – Linda Learns to Type is ok as far as these books go, but as I said in that Recommendsday post helped by the fact that Linda is working at a chocolate factory – partly because Chocolate, but also because if you know your history you know that a lot of the British chocolate manufacturers (Cadbury’s, Fry’s, Rowntree’s) were founded and owned by Quakers, so there was an element of religion going on there in reality (if you go to Cadburyworld you’ll see all about how their faith filtered into the way the company worked). But this is terrible – in fact the only good thing about it is that it’s the first time I’ve ever been the only person who’s rated (and reviewed) a book on Goodreads. And as I left it with my friend in Portugal, that may not even last!

Happy Humpday!

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: March 25 – March 31

it’s April Fool’s Day, and I’m wondering if I’m fooling myself because I’ve started another non-fiction book that has potential to end up in on the long-runners list because it’s a hardback. But the documentary that goes with the Lucy Worsley Agatha Christie book was on TV the other day and it reminded me that mum has just read the book and said it was really good, so off I went. Anyway, beyond that I’m challenging myself to try and get a little ahead with the NetGalley reading, by which I mean I’ve started the April books already – because we all know that I’m way behind with the NetGalley reading in general! But hey, at least I got one thing off the long-runners list last week. This week I’ve got a couple of days off work but also a couple of days of rail disruption (engineering work *and* strikes) so less commuting time than usual so we will see what happens.

Read:

Hand in Glove by Ngaio Marsh

Nabbed in New Mexico by Patti Benning

Lurking in Louisiana by Patti Benning

Dead Water by Ngaio Marsh

The Last Action Heroes by Nick de Semelyen

Foul Play in Florida by Patti Benning

The Potting Shed Murder by Paula Sutton*

Started:

Agatha Christie by Lucy Worsley

The Other Side of Disappearing by Kate Clayborn*

How to End a Love Story by Yulin Kuang*

Still reading:

The Lantern’s Dance by Laurie R King

Iris Kelly Doesn’t Date by Ashley Herring Blake

Travellers in the Third Reich by Julia Boyd

One pre-order, one ebook, two second-handbooks. Posititively restrained

Bonus picture: Easter Saturday evening in All Saints, Northampton. I do love a bit of church architecture and I always forget how spectacular it is inside here – it looks like something from Mayfair has been transported out of London.

*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: Late March Special edition

So I’ve pulled the trigger on an emergency Books Incoming because the pile of books that have arrived was getting very tall and a little wobbly, and that was before the arrivals while I was in Portugal. So here we are. To be fair, the mid-month post was early this month, and the photo was taken before Manila, so it was more a late February arrivals situation, but still. Ahem.

Half of this post is preorders of new releases – the RuPaul (which is signed!), the Armistead Maupin and the two Angela Thirkells – as Virago appear to have decided to release some more, which is going to mean another rearranging of the bookshelves! Then we have the airport purchases on the war to the Philippines – the Nita Prose sequel to The Maid and the new Tessa Bailey because I was intrigued by the idea of a golf romance!

The actual Manila purchases are the Beverly Jenkins, Susan Elizabeth Philips – which I have read but via the library and was such a bargain I couldn’t leave it in the shop and the final part of Angel Catbird which you can just about see at the back. And finally there’s the Diane Mott Davidson, which as I mentioned in the Goldy Schulz post is the last reasonably priced one that I can find.

And that’s it – as if it wasn’t enough! – until the next post at least and the pile is already not that small…