books on offer, Recommendsday

Recommendsday: August Kindle Offers

Oh this is a good month for offers. If by good month you mean Verity bought a bunch of books while writing this post!

Lets start with recent BotW Annabel Monaghan’s Summer Romance which is 99p, as is Tomorrow, and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin It was a BotW longer ago, but with a sequel coming soon is T J Klune’s The House in the Cerulean Sea. And the most recent in the H M The Queen Investigates series, A Death in Diamonds is 99p. More expensive at £2.99 but still very good are Kirsty Greenwood‘s The Love of My Afterlife and Sarah Adler’s Happy Medium which was also a BotW not that long ago and Suzanne Rindell‘s Summer Fridays is £3.99.

From the stuff I haven’t read but have on the tbr pile there’s Tom Hindle‘s Murder on Lake Garda, the fourth Before the Coffee Gets Cold novel Before We Say Goodbye, Match Point by Katherine Reilly, Alex Haye’s The Housekeepers Miriam Margolyes This Much is True Simone Soltani’s Cross the Line and The Fellowship of the Puzzlemakers by Samuel Burr. Ali Hazelwood‘s Check Mate is 99p as is Jessica Joyce’s The Ex Vows, which is her follow up to You With a View and Julie Soto’s Not Another Love Story which is her follow up to Forget Me Not.

This month’s bargain Terry Pratchetts are the graphic novel The Last Hero, Eric and The Ultimate Discworld Companion at 99p and Maskerade (think Phantom of the Opera, but Discworld) at £1.99. The Julia Quinns on offer are Lady Whistledown Strikes Back and The Secrets of Richard Kenworthy. The Georgette Heyer is The Lady of Quality. And one more from the classics shelf – Elizabeth von Arnim’s The Enchanted April is 99p – I really love this, it’s both 1920s-set (which I love) and about rediscovering yourself.

And now to the stuff I bought while writing this post – many of them things I mentioned when they came out and that I’ve been watching for a price drop on – like the new Ashley Poston A Novel Love Story, the new Christina Lauren Paradise Problem, Happily Never After by Lynn Painter, the latest Veronica Speedwell A Grave Robbery and the new Katherine Center The Romcommers which I had pre-ordered in paperback, but that isn’t out here until November so why wait?

Happy Humpday!

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Recommendsday: July Quick Reviews

It’s the first Wednesday of the month, and I’m back with some quick reviews. And this is a weird one, because there wasn’t actually a lot of stuff I hadn’t written about that I had loads of stuff to say about. But there are a couple, so here I am.

The Way We All Became the Brady Bunch by Kimberly Potts

Though I’ve never really watched the actual TV series of the Brady Bunch, I am a devotee of the two mid-90s movies based on it, so I picked this (really quite heavily marked up copy) up from the Oxfam near work quite a while back and finally got around to reading it. And although it jumps around somewhat in terms of the chronology, it’s a pretty good read. I’m not sure how much new stuff you’d learn if you were a series super-fan, but as someone with a casual interest and a bit of anecdotal knowledge when it comes to anything beyond the movies, I learned a lot – particularly about the impact of being on the show on the child actors – and enjoyed it.

The Vinyl Detective: Noise Floor by Andrew Cartmell

I wanted to report back in on this one – with a heavy heart – as I flagged it when it came out because it’s actually the first time this series has disappointed me. I’d been saving it for when I needed cheering up, but actually I sort of wish I hadn’t. I had some big issues with the first book in Carmel’s new (and linked) series The Paperback Sleuth, to the point where I didn’t buy the second one, and some of the things that I didn’t like about that I also spotted in this one. Now whether that’s because I’m looking for them now because the Paperback Sleuth has rubbed me up the wrong way so much, or because writing two series has led to a diminution in quality I don’t know. There is a good plot in here somewhere, but it’s too thin in the execution and overshadowed by the way it’s written and some of the flourishes. To sum up, after reading this, I haven’t bothered to pre-order the next one (which I have been doing since the second book in the series) although I probably will still read it if I can get it for a decent price. Urgh. I hate even writing this, but I do try to be honest with you all.

Next Best Fling by Gabriella Gamez*

And this is another one I’m reporting back on because I mentioned it on release day. I usually love a fake relationship romance – but this was just not it for me. The hero and heroine have a lot of unresolved issues and it felt less like they were together because they wanted to be and more like they had bonded over their shared mutal pining for someone else. Add to that the fact there were that some issues with the ex that made it all just a bit harder and less escapist to read than I’d been hoping, and it added up to a not for me – but like How to End a Love Story, I think other people may like it more than me!

And that’s your lot – happy Wednesday and here is a clip from the Brady Bunch Movie to send you on your way…

Best of..., Recommendsday

Recommendsday: Best new books of 2024 so far

Yes, it’s nearly the end of July, so we’re well over six months in to the year, but I’m here and I’m using this week’s Recommendsday to shout out my favourite books of the year so far, in no particular order.

But I’m going to start with At First Spite, Olivia Dade’s latest novel, which came out in February and which I read basically as soon as the paperback hit my doormat. It’s the first in a new series, and features a heroine who finds her self living in a tiny house between her ex-fiancé on one side and his brother on the other. If you go and read my Book of the Week review for this, you’ll see that it’s not all sunshine and roses for Athena, but it all works out beautifully. And I can’t wait for the next book in the series, which is currently called Dearly Departed, whenever it arrives.

Next up is a March release – Kate Claybourn’s The Other Side of Disappearing, which is a romance, a mystery and a road trip as two sisters travel across the US with a podcast production crew to try and find out what happened to the con-man their mum used to date. This also has a retired college football (the American kind) player – so if you’re after sporty-themed books this is another one – but I couldn’t include it in last week’s Recommendsday, because: statute of limitations, and also twice in a week would be boring!

And now an April release – Emily Henry’s Funny Story. And I ummed and ahhed about whether to include this because I feel like I’ve written so much about her over the years, but then I went back and checked my review and I read it in less than 18 hours, which is probably the quickest of any of the books on the list, so how could I leave it off? It’s another newly single heroine, who is stuck in close proximity to her ex, but more different to At First Spite than that makes it sound. It’s so good, and I would read it again today, if only I didn’t have so many other books on the go at once…

On to May, and a book that I bought in paperback after reading the kindle sample and then read immediately. I explain in my review of Summer Fridays why this is going to divide romance readers, but I loved it and I think it is closer to “a Novel” than “a romance”. Travel back to 1999 New York with Sawyer and spend the summer with her and Nick as she figures out what she’s doing with her life. If you’re about to go on holiday, this might be the perfect sun lounger read.

This was very nearly an all romance post – and indeed I’ve grouped them all together, but I wanted to include one other new release – Mona of the Manor. Yes, it’s the tenth in the Tales of the City series but I think it stands alone more easily than the other contender for this final place which was the final Maisie Dobbs novel, The Comfort of Ghosts. Mona of the Manor is a fill in of a portion of the Tales Story we haven’t seen – and as it’s in the British countryside in the 1990s it’s pretty self-contained. And it’s so much fun as Mona tries to make ends meet by turning the country house she’s inherited into a not-quite-a-hotel with the help of her adopted son.

And there you have it. My five favourite new books of the year so far. I think. But as ever, I’m a fickle thing, and who knows what will be the top five by the end of the year!

Happy humpday!

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Recommendsday: Sports romances

The Olympics Opening Ceremony takes place in Paris on Friday, but actually the first bits of action happen today with the start of the football and rugby 7s pool games, so for this Recommendsday I’m reminding you of some of the sports romances that I’ve enjoyed – although full disclaimer, a lot of these sports aren’t in the olympics.

The men’s 100m at the weekend

But I’m going to start with one that is – football of the soccer variety and recent BotW pick When Grumpy met Sunshine which has a bad boy of football in a fake relationship with his ghost writer. There’s also Chloe Liese’s Bergman Brothers series, which has a couple of soccer stars among the heroes and heroines – like in If Only You, which has the double whammy of a soccer-playing heroine and an ice hockey player hero.

In fact ice hockey romances seem to have overtaken NFL players as the sport you’re most likely to see in a romance novel, possibly because the word puck rhymes so usefully for a title. Before the ice hockey romance craze, most of the sports romances were about NFL players, like Susan Elizabeth Philips’ Chicago Stars series or Alexa Martin’s Playbook series. And now we’ve got a growing group of baseball romances too, so I can only assume that we’re a year max away from a load of basketball player romances.

I have read more baseball romances than other sports recently – but that’s not saying much because it’s basically just Cat Sebastian’s two historical ones – You Should Be So Lucky and We Could Be So Good. It’s not quite a straight romance-romance, but Linda Holmes’s Evvie Drake Starts Over remains among my favourite novels of recent years.

I often find it quite tricky to recommend some of the more recently published sports romances, because everything is tending very New Adult and that is not my bag at all. I’ve read at least two NFL romances in the last six months where the blurb has seemed like it was right up my street and then in the reading I’ve wanted to throw them across the room* because they’ve annoyed me so much. And no I’m not going to tell you who that is, but I’m sure you can work it out if you look through my Goodreads reviews!

In terms of my own to-read pile, I’ve got Let The Games Begin which is actually set at an Olympics, Match Point which is tennis, Tessa Bailey’s Fan Girl Down which is about golf and Cross the Line which is about Formula One on my to-read pile.

Happy Wednesday everyone

*but I didn’t because they were ebooks and I might have damaged my Kindle if it hit something.

Recommendsday

Recommendsday: Books about Hollywood

After writing about some Hollywood-set fiction yesterday, I thought this week might be a great opportunity for a round up of some of the Hollywood-set or related non-fiction I’ve read over the years. This has got a couple of things that I’ve not mentioned before, but also some that have been to a greater or lesser extent.

Let’s start with one of those new things: I read Shawn Levy’s The Castle on Sunset a couple of years ago, but I can’t find that I really wrote much about it here, so I can rectify that now. This is a history of the Chateau Marmont, possibly the most famous hotel in Hollywood, used by generations of stars for all sorts of things. Depending on your age you may remember it as where John Belushi died, or the hotel Lindsay Lohan got kicked out of – and both of those are in this, along with a lot more.

I’ve reorganised this bookshelf since this picture was taken, but there are a few here that might be of interest. Helen O’Hara’s Women vs Hollywood look at female pioneers in the early days of the movies and how women were then pushed out. I don’t know what it’s not on this shelf, but if you want Golden Age Hollywood of a similar era to Loretta, then Karina Longworth’s Seduction: Sex, Lies and Stardom in Howard Hughes’s Hollywood which focuses on the women pursued by the millionaire movie mogul from the 1920s through til the 1950s. And from a similar era there is Trumbo about the screenwriter who was blacklisted in the communist panic.

There are loads of books about individual stars too. I remember Gerald Clarke’s Get Happy about Jusy Garland as being pretty good, but it’s been closer to 15 years than ten. And I don’t know where my copy is but J Randy Taraborrelli’s The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe was a good read when I read it even longer ago – I wonder how it holds up! Taraborrelli has a fair line in Kennedy-related books, some of which I keep meaning to get hold of, because we all know I like a good book about that particular dysfunctional family. He’s also written about Elizabeth Taylor – who is another frequent books subject. I’ve read Furious Love about her relationship with Richard Burton, Elizabeth and Monty about her friendship with Montgomery Clift – and I’ve got Kate Anderson Brower‘s biography on my to read pile too.

And then there’s the other stuff I want to read – Laurence Leamer’s Hitchcock’s Blondes – which came out last year, just as the adaptation of his book about Capote’s Women was appearing on streaming services. I’ve got another Marilyn book on the kindle too – this time about Bobby Kennedy and Marilyn. I also want to read Oscar Wars, Michael Schulman’s history of the Academy Awards and Katie Gee Salisbury’s Not Your China Doll about Anna May Wong.

Happy Wednesday!

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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!

Recommendsday

Recommendsday: June Quick Reviews

Only three things to tell you about today, and one of them is a check in on something I mentioned on release day, but hey, here we go:

One Last Summer by Kate Spencer*

I read Kate Spencer’s In A New York Minute back in 2022 and enjoyed it so I was really excited to see what she had written next. This is about a group of friends who met at summer camp and have kept a tradition going of meeting up at that camp again into adulthood. But this summer is the last hurrah – because the camp is being sold. Clara our heroine hasn’t been on the last few reunions – but her boss has forced her to take time off so she’s back – and now has to deal with her former camp crush Mack. I really liked the premise, but I found Clara really hard to like and the one-upmanship vibe that her relationship with Mack has is just not my thing. It will be for some people – but it veered to close to the “I’m pranking you to show you I like you” vibe that can really get on my last nerve. It was also much closer to New Adult in feel than I was expecting. Not for me – but never mind, I know other people will really like it, which is why I’m including it here.

Truly, Madly, Deeply by Alexandria Bellefleur

I mentioned this when it came out, so now I’ve read it, it’s only fair I come back to report. I’ve got a longer summary of the plot in that last post – but it’s a jaded romance author and a family lawyer at the centre of it and a enemies to lovers plot. I’m sad to report that it didn’t really work for me – mainly because of some issues with the subplots that I can’t really explain without spoiling them completely. But I am finding a theme with the Alexandria Bellefleurs that I’ve read that I like the idea of them or the plot description more than I like the actual execution. Count Your Lucky Stars was a BotW – but I had an issue with the final act. I don’t ever hate them – because I keep coming back for more – I just don’t ever love them-love them if that makes sense!

Career Books for Girls by Kay Clifford

It’s only a month to go before Book Con 2024, so I’m having a quick check that I’ve read everything I bought home from Bristol two years ago (yes, I know, I know) and this was one of the ones I found. As the title suggests, this is basically an encyclopaedia of books aimed at encouraging girls into careers, or informing them about what was actually involved in careers, in the long first half of the twentieth century. I had read more of them than I was expecting – and I really liked Kay’s writing which wryly points out the issues with the world view of these books as well as telling you about them. It’s not meant to be read all at once, more a dip into type thing, but that didn’t stop me!

And that’s it for this month, a reminder of the Books of Week in June were: Summer Fridays, Summer Romance, The Formula and A Nobleman’s Guide for Seducing a Scoundrel.

Happy Humpday!

LGTBQIA+, Recommendsday

Recommendsday: Non-fiction for Pride Month

It’s the final Wednesday in June, so for the last Recommendsday of the month I’m following on from last weeks’ fiction picks for Pride Month, with some non-fiction option.

Young Bloomsbury by Nino Strachey

Let’s start with something that I finished last week.This is a group biography of the second generation of the Bloomsbury Group, who joined in with the first wave in the 1920s when people like Virginia Woolf and Lytton Strachey were at the height of their powers and influence. There are a lot of people in this – many of them named Strachey – so it can some times get a little confusing, but it’s a very readable look at some of the lesser-spotted Bloomsburies and what they got up to. Very much an overview, and so I’m now off to see what there is on some of the more interesting figures in this that I didn’t already know about!

Wild Dances by William Lee Adams

This is a slightly strange one to write about – because William is actually a work colleague! As well as working with me, William is a massively popular Eurovision expert who runs a YouTube channel and blog. How did he get from small town Georgia (the US state, not the country) to here? His memoir will tell you and it’s quite the journey. Reading this was the first time I read a memoir written by someone who I know in real life, so that was slightly disconcerting experience. But the book is really powerful and worth reading even if you don’t like Eurovision.

I’ve already recommended a load of really good non-fiction that fits into their category too – like The Art of Drag – which you can see in the photo behind William’s book; Legendary Children – about RuPaul’s Drag Race’s first decade; Fabulosa – about the secret gay language Polari; and Harvey Fierstein’s memoir I Was Better Last Night. And currently on the pile waiting to be read, I have Queer City – about the history of gay London, The Crichel Boys – about a literary salon adjacent to the Bloomsbury group; and RuPaul’s memoir The House of Hidden Meanings. I’m also looking out for Bad Gays – looking at overlooked gay figures in history, and Hi Honey, I’m Homo – about queer comedy and the American sitcom.

Happy Wednesday!

LGTBQIA+, Recommendsday

Recommendsday: Fiction for Pride Month

Now we’re through the quick reviews and the kindle offers, I thought I’d do this week’s Recommendsday with some fiction picks for Pride month. And it turns out, I’ve already read and recommended a lot so narrowing the field down was the tricky bit – but I’ve given it a good go.

Now a lot of the stuff I’ve read the most recently has been romance – and I’ve told you about loads of them already. But that’s not going to stop me from reminding you about some of my favourites. So there’s Alexis Hall’s Boyfriend Material, K J Charles’s Secret Lives of Country Gentlemen and the Bright Falls Series. And of course it’s just a few weeks since Cat Sebastian’s You Should Be So Lucky was Book of the Week.

Talking of recent books of the week – there’s Mona of the Manor and in fact the whole of Armistead Maupin’s Tales of the City series. I struggle a lot with comps for these because they’re just so wonderful and the early ones uniquely capture the moment that they were written in – San Francisco in the mid-1970s. But another book that captures the moment that it was written in is Christopher Isherwood’s Goodbye to Berlin – a fictionalised version of the author’s time in Berlin in the dying days of the Weimar Republic. Written a couple of years after his return, it was published in 1939. If you’ve read many/any books set in 1930s Berlin then this is worth a read even if only to see how it was seen at the time.

I’m hopping around a bit, but I’m going back to YA for a second – as well as Heartstopper, Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe (which has a sequel) Red, White and Royal Blue, Our Own Private Universe and The Gravity of Us, there is What if it’s Us which I haven’t read yet, but which comes highly recommended by my friend Tom.

And that’s all I’ve got today – but have a great Wednesday!

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Recommendsday: June Kindle Offers

Hello I’m back again to tempt you into spending more money on Kindle books to add your to-read piles, which I’m sure are already bulging, but we’re heading into summer holiday season, so if you needed an excuse to buy a book (or two) make this it!

There are a bunch of former Books of the Week on offer this month so lets start there. I mentioned The Dead Romantics in my Books with Ghosts recommendsday the other week, so it’s only fair to mention that this former BotW is 99p at the moment. Another is Cathy Yardley‘s Role Playing – I loved this so much this time last year – then there is also Forget Me Not by Julie Soto – who has her second book out next month. At the same price is A Very Lively Murder, the second Three Dahlias book – ahead of the arrival of book three next month.

The third Emmy Lake book is 99p at the moment – I reviewed Mrs Porter Calling when it came out last year, but it’s got a fresh cover (I assume for the paperback edition) in case that’s confusing you. I’m still hoping for a fourth in the series too, but no news yet and it’s usually two years between these so it’s not “due” until next year so I’m not worried yet. It’s got a new cover since I bought it, but K J Charles‘s The Gentle Art of Fortune Hunting is 99p – the second in this series (although it will be standalone) is out next month as well.

Carley Fortune is a new to me author, but I’ve seen lots of good reviews of her other books and her latest This Summer Will Be Different is 99p at the moment – I bought this last month – but it’s still on offer as I write this. In other new books that I haven’t read yet, Sarah Morgan’s summer novel is 99p at the moment – it’s called The Summer Swap. And I mentioned Kirsty Greenwood’s new book in my Summer of Not Sequels post, so it’s only fair to mention that another of the Novelicious crew Cressida McLaughlin has a new book out this summer too and The Happy Hour is 99p.

We’re only on series three of Bridgerton, but book five in the series – aka Eloise’s story – is on offer at the moment. I really like To Sir Philip, With Love, but I know that it’s not everyone’s favourite and if you’ve watched the series before reading the books it may be a bit of a shock to you! In other TV tie-in news, we have The Magpie Murders at 99p – I loved the books, I loved the TV series and I’m on record as wishing Anthony Horowitz could write more of them. I’m almost embarrassed about how many times I’ve mentioned Curtis Sittenfeld’s Romantic Comedy now, but I did love it so much that I can’t really be sorry. It’s 99p, read it on the beach.

If you want some non-fiction, Jen Gunter’s The Vagina Bible is 99p -which I’ve read, and her Menopause Manifesto, which I haven’t.

My dad recently discovered that there was a Discworld book he hadn’t read – I wish I could have a similar moment but sadly I know I’ve read them all. But it’s that time of year again where I’m thinking about which Discworld book to re-read – and Guards! Guards! is always right up there and if I didn’t already own it, it’s £1.99 at the moment and is a great place to start the series. GNU Sir Terry and if you’re wondering, the one that Dad hadn’t read was Equal Rites. Talking of my family, Ralph’s Party by Lisa Jewell was one of my sister’s favourites back when we were teenagers, I thought it was new at the time – but doing the maths as it has a 25th anniversary edition out now, it really can’t have been!

The Convenient Marriage is this month’s 99p Georgette Heyer, both the first Poirot and the first Miss Marple books are 99p if you want some Agatha Christie, and The Pursuit of Love by Nancy Mitford is also on offer if you want some Bright Young Things in action.

And surely that’s enough books now? It’s all you’re getting anyway – so Happy Humpday!