streaming, tv

Not A Book: Boyzone No Matter What

Happy Sunday, this weekend I’m back with a post about another documentary series.

I am of the age that I lived through the peak of the early boyband era and so the crop of documentaries that have popped up about them recently have been a total boon for me – even if the reality that the members of the bands that I loved wasn’t the shiny happy experience that we thought they were having when we were watching them back in the day. And we have had a run of them – BBC Two had Boybands Forever just before Christmas which looked at the whole crop of bands that came through starting in the 90s and now Sky has done this three part look at Boyzone.

So if you are unfamiliar with Boyzone, they were five young men from Ireland – Ronan, Stephen, Mikey, Shane and Keith, who were formed a public auditions by Louis Walsh later went onto manage Westlife and also to be a judge on the X factor. They really came to prominence after the demise or split of Take That and had a clean cut, wholesome and youthful image – Ronan for example wasn’t even out of his teens when the band came through. What I didn’t realise at the time was that they were from very working class backgrounds and from quite a rough area of Dublin and that’s a big theme of how the experience affected them. When I went to the launch event for Reach for the Stars a couple of years ago, Nicola Robers from Girls Aloud was the special guest talking to Michael Wragg, and one of the things that she talked about was the fact that TV talent shows were a route into the music industry for working class kids and the challenges that that presented, and although Boyzone were not a TV talent show group, I think a lot of the things that she spoke about also applied to them – not really having lived away from their parents before, a lack of knowledge about how the industry worked, a dependence on the management companies who were in charge of them but who didn’t necessarily have the best interests of the band members at heart.

Unlike Take That who had the hit machine that was Gary Barlow, Boyzone had no real songwriter – they were put together by Louis Walsh, boyband svengali and future X Factor judge, who it should be noted very much gets the villain edit in this – although I don’t think it took much editing to do that – a clip that’s been doing the rounds since the show went out shows him admitting that he told the press that the boys had been in a plane crash (they hadn’t) and then didn’t tell their families, leaving them to find out in the press that their loved ones had supposedly cheated death. Anyway, Boyzone were best know for a string of hit cover version of songs by people like Tracy Chapman and the Bee Gees. If you’ve only heard of one Boyzone song, it will likely be No Matter What – an Andrew Lloyd Webber composition that came from his musical version of Whistle Down the Wind that they released as a single to coincide with the launch of the musical in the West End, or their Comic Relief single* When the Going Gets Tough

After a couple of hugely successful years, they went on hiatus “for a year”, Ronan went solo and one year turned into more – until a hugely successful first reunion tour and then the death of Stephen Gately at the age of just 33. I still remember exactly where I was when I heard that Stephen had died, and that loss of Stephen is the bit of their story that is obviously tragic, but it turns out what was going on behind the scenes was something that has clearly left all four remaining members with a lot of issues. Mikey – or Michael as he is captioned throughout – was always the member of the band that was the easiest to forget about, but in this documentary he probably has the most to say about the impact being on the band had – and still has on him and how hard he’s had to work to build himself into the person that he is now.

It’s not exactly a cheerful watch – but it is fascinating. And when combined with Boybands Forever, you get a real picture of the damage that fame can do to young people when they find themselves in the limelight and at the centre of a press scrum (particularly the sort of press scrum that was going on in the late 1990s and early 2000s) without people properly looking out for them. I wish I could say that lessons have been learned and that emerging stars are better looked after, but I’m not sure that the evidence suggests that they are.

Boyzone: No Matter What is available to stream on Now TV and they’re showing all three parts back to back on Sky Documentaries next weekend.

*Truly having the Comic Relief single was a massive deal in the 1990s – Boyzone came in a run that went Pet Shop Boys; Chrissie Hynde, Cher, Neneh CHerry and Eric Clapton; the Spice Girls; Boyzone; Westlife; Gareth Gates andbMcFly; and if you don’t remember the era of singles sales you may not quite understand and I feel so old just typing that.

bookshops

Books in the Wild: Verity Wanders

Here we go again, this week’s Saturday post is basically the result of me wandering around a lot of bookshops over the last few weeks and having some thoughts about it and about me and my reading habits.

Firstly, I think we’re living in a really interesting time for cover design at the moment. I think we went through a whole phase of being able to work out pretty much what genre a book was in just by looking at the cover – and now: not so much. Or at least not so much at the moment. I mean we all know what I read most of the time, and I still picked up a bunch of these to read the backs because of the covers. And some of them were intriguing, but we all know that I’d buy one and it would sit on the shelves for actual years as I picked almost everything else to read first!

Moving towards stuff that I might actually read, we’ve got some new hardback crime fiction, which actually makes me feel guilty all over again – because I have Alex Hay’s last book, at least one Tom Hindle and the Oskar Jensen that Helle’s Hound is a sequel to still waiting to be read. Lets move on quickly before I feel any worse.

Having just said that I’m feeling bad for not reading things, this has the book I acutally bought on it – I was in Foyles on the Tuesday before Show Don’t Tell was published and was delighted to see it out early – and signed. So I bought it. And I’ve read it now. Sue me

Moving on, this is actually my local Waterstones and the tower they use for new hardbacks. This is the crime side and it is interesting to me that this is the first place (I think) that I’ve seen Steph Plum 31 in the flesh, which as it came out in the autumn is a surprise. It’s also the first time I’ve come across A Trial in Three Acts – which like the Curtis Sittenfeld was out on the shelves a few days early – this was taken last Saturday and it only came out officially two days ago. Sidenote: it’s enough to make me think twice about pre-ordering books if I might be able to get a copy from an actual bookshop a few days early, but authors need pre-orders. What a dilemma. Anyway, a Trial in Three Acts is a legal mystery about a murder committed live on stage. And as we all know I love a theatre-set mystery, so this just went onto my list of books to look out for at the airport! Also, I love the cover of A Stolen Heart, which it seems is the second book set in Soviet-controlled Kyiv in 1919. As we know, I like to read in order, so I’ll have to find the first one in this series in a shop (or as a Kindle sample) and have a read because it sounds intriguing but also like it has huge potential to be Too Grim.

And finally, more new fiction, more lovely covers, more books I hadn’t heard about mixed in with books that I have. I have now picked up The House With Nine Locks at least three times because of the gorgeous cover before reading the back and remembering that blurbs that include “a dangerous game of cat and mouse with fanatical and brutal detective” and the phrase “morally complex” are usually Not For Me. See also 33 Place Brugmann which has the word “devastating” in the blurb and is about occupied Brussels in World War 2. I have also picked up The Book of Gold more than once – but it is the first (and so far only published) book in a promised trilogy so that can wait!

Have a great Saturday!

Series I love

Series I Love: Lady Julia Grey

Deanna Raybourn’s sequel to Killers of a Certain Age came out this week, and when I was planning content for the blog for March I realised that I have never written a proper series post about Raybourn’s Lady Julia Grey series. I know. I was as surprised as you are. I’ve written about Veronica Speedwell, and I’ve done a few reviews of books in the series and mentioned them in Recommendsday posts, but never an actual series post. So in honour of the release of Kills Well With Others, this Friday I’m putting that right!

Books from the Lady Julia series

At the start of Silent in the Grave, Sir Edward Grey collapses and dies in front of his wife Julia and a house full of guests. Julia is initially prepared to accept that it’s an accident, but the private inquiry agent her husband had hired to investigate a series of threatening letters is not. And soon Julia too is convinced and the two of them try to work out who was behind the death and sees Julia caught up in a dark

As I’ve mentioned before, Silent in the Grave has a fabulous opening that really sets the tone for the series: “To say that I met Nicholas Brisbane over my husband’s dead body is not entirely accurate. Edward, it should be noted, was still twitching on the floor.” I’m struggling to believe while I’m writing this that it came out nearly twenty years ago, and I first read it a decade ago. But I think if you like the tone of Veronica Speedwell, you will also like this. There are a couple of standalone Raybourns that have a slightly different feel, but this has the banter and the mystery and the slow burn romance that she has built on in the (even slower burn in some ways) Speedwell books, but just set in the Victorian rather than the Edwardian era.

And the even better news is that they’re all on some form of offer at the moment on Kindle – you can get Silent in the Grave for 99p as you can with books three and four, with books two and five at £1.99 so basically you can get the whole series for under £7. The picture on Kobo is somewhat similar – although they don’t seem to have book three as far as I can see. Either way, it’s cheaper than trying to buy hard copies because it looks like they’re somewhat out of print. I’m also somewhat annoyed that I could only track down three of the five for the photo because I know I own them all, and it bugs me when I can’t track books down on my shelves when I want to!

Happy Reading!

Book previews

Out Today: Paul Delamere sequel

The first book featuring Paul Delamere, Knife Skills for Beginners, was a Book of the Week last year and given how much I’ve seen it in bookstores, it’s probably no surprise that Orlando Murrin has written a sequel. In Murder Below Deck Paul finds himself on board a super yacht with an old friend, but things start going wrong when a necklace goes missing and then a guest ends up dead. I’ve got a copy of this from NetGalley and have got as far as the necklace disappearing and Paul getting roped in to do some cooking – no body yet, but I had a migraine that stopped me getting further. But so far, so good. I’m expecting this to be fairly easy to get hold of because of how well the first book has done – that paperback came out in January with a snazzy new cover and I’m pretty sure it was on the “buy one get one half price” table in at least one of the bookshops I’ve been into since then.

book round-ups, Recommendsday

Recommendsday: February Quick Reviews

It’s the first Wednesday of the month, and I’m back with the quick reviews. And for the first time in ages I actually finished all of the books I had from NetGalley that came out last month. Who knew I was even capable of that. Anyway, here we are with a quick round up of three books – two murder mysteries and a romance – I haven’t already told you about.

Murder in the Dressing Room by Holly Stars*

This is a cozy mystery set in the world of drag performers in London. Our “detective” is Misty/Joe who discovers the body of her drag mother backstage at a club night and starts investigating because the police seem more focused on the stolen dress that Lady Lady was wearing. I really liked the setting for this – I walk around Soho quite a lot as it’s near my office, and lots of the locations were familiar to me. I liked Misty and the way you could see how her persona changed when she was Misty compared to normal life as Joe. However they were a little foolhardy/too stupid to live at times. There’s a big hanging plot thread for the next one which I’m not sure about, but overall I enjoyed this and would read more in the series if it came my way.

The Tube Train Murder by Hugh Morrison

This was another new(ish) release – that came out in early January, but that I didn’t spot straightaway. This is a new standalone mystery from the author of the Reverend Shaw mysteries, which I binged my way through last year. This sees a young woman murdered on a tube train, and the investigation taking in the residents or the boarding house where she was living while she went to secretarial college. Those residents include another student at the same college who is unhappy at the progress the police are making. The mystery is good – and the boarding house setting is well drawn. It’s in Kindle unlimited so like yesterday’s The Ten Teacups worth a look if you’re a member.

Book Boyfriend by Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka*

I really, really enjoyed The Roughest Draft which I bought two years ago and was a BotW. I was then disappointed and puzzled by The Break Up tour last year – which was the husband and wife duo’s Taylor Swift inspired romance. This is set at an immersive experience based on a romantasy novel, where two work colleagues and sort-of-enemies unexpectedly encounter each other. I was hoping this would be closer to the Roughest Draft than The Break Up Tour, but sadly it’s another puzzler for me. I didn’t understand why the two leads hadn’t just had a conversation to clear the air after their initial misunderstanding, and the heroine was just really immature for how old – and established in her career – she is meant to be. Frustrating. I still have the book that came in between Roughest Draft and Break Up tour on the Kindle waiting to be read and I’m starting to worry that that first one I liked was a fluke…

And that’s the lot for this month. Given how short February is, I’m pleased with myself for even getting to free!

Happy Humpday!

Book of the Week, Forgotten books

Book of the Week: The Ten Teacups

Another Tuesday, another British Library Crime Classic pick. And yes I finished it this week. But no, I don’t care. It was a difficult week in new reading and I stand by my choices. Have a read of Recommendsday tomorrow and you’ll understand.

This is a locked room mystery of the most impossible type: the police receive a note that evokes a cold case, telling them to go to a house in Berwick terrace at a given date and time. There they set up a cordon – but still at the appointed time, shots ring out and a man is dead. But who did it and how? Sir Henry Merrivale is called in to try and solve the crime.

John Dickson Carr – writing here as Carter Dickson – is one of the masters of the locked room and impossible mysteries and at times in this it feels like he’s trying to outdo his previous efforts (like The White Priory Murder) by creating an even more unsolvable crime. And although I have a few reservations, this is a twisty and atmospheric read that keeps you turning the pages right until the end.

This is one of the most recent BLCC releases – it only came out in early February, but it’s in Kindle Unlimited at the moment if you’re in that program. Otherwise I’m sure the paperback will pop up in bookshops that stock the British library crime paperbacks – I forgot to check for it in Foyles last week but I would be surprised if it wasn’t there in their selection.

Happy Reading!

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: February 24 – March 2

A really, really busy week. They just are some times aren’t they? But it was fun, and I did things in real life and things just seem to all come at once sometimes don’t they? Anyway, it’s March now, and I have a quieter week planned this week – at least I have less things booked into this week than I did last week…

Read:

Opening Night by Ngaio Marsh

The Tube Train Murder by Hugh Morrison

Scales of Justice by Ngaio Marsh

Shocked in Chicago by Patti Benning

Book Boyfriend by Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka*

The Janus Stone by Elly Griffiths

Started:

Abdication by Juliet Nicolson

Show Don’t Tell by Curtis Sittenfeld

The Ten Teacups by Carter Dickson

Still reading:

A Traveller in Time by Alison Utley

Cher: The Memoir Part One by Cher

One – the new Curtis Sittenfeld because Foyles had signed copies which wer just sitting there staring at me in Foyles, two days ahead of release day – so I cancelled my Amazon pre-order and went with it!

Bonus picture: Another night out at Late Night West End – this time it was Shanay Holmes (current Nancy in Oliver) speaking to John Robyns.

*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 adjacent

Book Adjacent: Charles Paris dramas

Happy Sunday everyone, we’ve made it safely into a new month and the mornings are getting lighter, which given how early I catch the train to work can only be a good thing! Anyway, a book adjacent treat for your ears today:

I’ve written about the books in the Charles Paris series before, but Radio 4 have done a really good series of dramatisations of them – and I’ve just got finished listening to the latest one, Situation Tragedy. As you can see from the picture, Bill Nighy is Charles and he’s captured the louche, lightly drunk, slightly bumbling, just good enough to keep getting enough work that he can stay in the acting profession persona of Charles brilliantly.

But actually for me, the cleverest bit of the dramatisations is the way that they’ve managed to update some of the books. Simon Brett started writing the series in the mid 1970s but they exist in what I call the floating now – which is to say that Charles has been in his late 50s for nearly 50 years at this point (the most recent book came out in 2018) and obviously a lot has changed in the world of acting as well as the world in general during that time, but Jeremy Front (who has adapted most of them) finds ways to bring them up to date and give them a bit of continuity (especially as the adaptations haven’t been in the same order they were published). There are a few changes – some more major than others but it’s fun – and funny – and undemanding to listen to Charles work his way fringe theatre, musicals, audiobook narration, instructional training videos, documentary extras, radio plays, the whole shebang.

I was a bit slow to spot Situation Tragedy – so it’s already starting to disappear from BBC Sounds, but it’ll be available from Audible later on in the year. And the rest of the series do pop up from time to time being repeated on the radio which puts them back on Sounds – Doubtful Death is on there at the moment for example. But there are also three collected editions of the dramatisations.

Have a great Sunday!

books, stats

February Stats

Books read this month: 30*

New books: 20

Re-reads: 10 (9 audiobooks)

Books from the to-read pile: 2

NetGalley books read: 5

Kindle Unlimited read: 10

Ebooks: 3

Audiobooks: 9

Non-fiction books: 1

Favourite book: Hard to decide – either The Favourites or The Crossing Places per my stats page on Goodreads

Most read author: hard to tell because only one book finished for everyone except the Ngaio Marsh and Agatha Christie re-listens, but I did start a second Elly Griffiths book so maybe her?

Books bought: too many

Books read in 2025: 61

Books on the Goodreads to-read shelf (I don’t have copies of all of these!): 760

A solid month in the end, although a fair few novellas and audiobook re-listens in there. Onwards to March!

Bonus picture: A relic of my student days is that I am unable to resist a cocktail with Midori in it, even if it comes with googly eyes.

*includes some short stories/novellas/comics/graphic novels – including 5 this month!

series

Bingeable series: Once Upon a Bookstore

Does it count as a series when it’s three novellas? Well it does now. But it’s definitely bingeable because I read the first two back to back and then had to tap my foot and wait for the third!

The Once Upon a Time Bookstore of the title is on an island in Maine. In the first book we meet Isabel who ran away from the island as soon as she could to escape from sad memories. Her sister Sophie hasn’t spoken to her since but when Isabel gets a mysterious letter, she heads home. Each entry in the series returns to the island and a different moment in the lives of Isabel and Sophie. There are three at the moment – with the latest out this week, and a fourth has now appeared for pre-sale that’s due to arrive in May.

These are a little more tear-jerky that I usually read, but the length really helped with that. Over the years I’ve discovered that I don’t really want to read 300 pages of self-discovery through tragedy, but I do like a little bit of it – and it seems about 50 pages an instalment with a very clear focus on one specific issue and a definite conclusion is the sweet spot for me! The algorithm suggested the first one to me and I went straight on to the second – and would have read the third if it had been available. Luckily I was reading them close to release date for book three because as it turns out that there were years long gaps between them all and we all know I’m terrible at remembering to come back to things!

Anyway these are in Kindle Unlimited which was perfect for me because I’m not sure the page length to cost ratio would have worked otherwise, but it does mean they’re not on Kobo.

Have a great weekend everyone.