Tuesday, 1 March 2022

Book Review: Charlotte Pass by Lee Christine

 Charlotte Pass
by
Lee Christine

A shocking discovery deep in the Snowy Mountains. A killer who will do anything to keep secrets buried.
 
 
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
 
Publication date: 4th February 2020
 
Series: Alpine #1
 
Genre: Crime / Thriller
 
Pages: 320
 
RRP: $29.99 AUD
 
Format read: Uncorrected proof paperback
 
Source: courtesy of the publisher
 
My review
 
When human bones are discovered, by ski patroller Vanessa Bell, near an abandoned chair lift at Charlotte Pass a cold case is reopened and Pierce Ryder is taken off the case of finding murder suspect Gavin Hutton and appointed head of this investigation.
 
I have already read book 2 in this series and i loved reading the story of how Vanessa and Pierce met. There is a very subtle romance weaving through this crime thriller. Lee Christine has written each of the books so they stand alone well.
 
In Charlotte Pass we are introduced to DS Pierce Ryder and his partner DC Mitchell Flowers. I loved the way this partnership grew and solidified as the story progressed. Ryder meets up with an old friend, retired Detective Lewicki, who worked a missing persons case in the area in 1964. Both are convinced the bones are the missing women and they must determine if she was murdered or died from exposure.
 
The suspense builds in this atmospheric mystery as ski patroller Vanessa Bell finds her own life in grave danger. As the ski lodged is closed down and everyone is interviewed it becomes clear that many of the villagers have something to hide.
 
I thoroughly enjoyed this fast paced read. I was hooked from the prologue and found it hard to put down. The characters are well written and realistic and I liked that the passages on Ryder's past didn't take away from the story but gave the reader a little insight into why he comes across as harsh.
 
The added details of the hazards encountered in the skiing industry and the harsh conditions was intriguing to this reader who has never visited the area.
 
Atmospheric, suspenseful and impossible to put down, Charlotte Pass is a must read for thriller fans.
 
My rating 5 / 5  ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

 
About the author
 
In 2009, former corporate trainer Lee Chrsitine decided to turn her writing hobby into a serious day job. Charlotte Pass is her first crime novel. She lives in Newcastle, NSW, with her husband and her Irish Wheaten Terrier.


 
 
 
 
 
 
Click on image to read my review
 

 

Monday, 28 February 2022

Mailbox Monday - February 28th

 Mailbox Monday is the gathering place for readers to share the books that came in their mailbox during the last week (or month). I post my new books on the last Monday of the month. Mailbox Monday now has a permanent home at the Mailbox Monday Blog
 

 
Happy Monday!

The heat of last month has been replaced by rain, rain and more rain. One advantage is that the lawn is looking lush and green.

Below are some photos of what I've been up to over the last month.


The local shopping centre had a dragon dance exhibition. I have an irrational fear of people dressed up in costumes so this photo was taken far away from the actual dancers.


The lovely thing about rain is the rainbows after.

 
 
 Jay started school this year and has taken it all in his stride.
 

My son got married last weekend. Top photo: My son and his new wife. Bottom photo: My husband and I. I'm happy to take a break from weddings for a while now. 😀

 

 Books I purchased and received for review during February 
 
 
Review books

Summer at Kangaroo Ridge by Nicole Hurley-Moore

Lily Harford's Last Request - Joanna Buckley

Brunswick Street Blues - Sally Bothroyd

Snowy Mountains Cattleman - Alissa Callen

Mothers and Daughters - Erica James

With This Kiss - Carrie Hope Fletcher

So Many Beats of the Heart - Carrie Cox

My purchases

Again Rachel - Marian Keyes

Letters From the Past - Erica James
 
 Children's books for review
 

 Trains, Trains, Trains! - Donna David

The Magical Girls Guide to Life - Jacque Aye

Dinosaur Squeak! - Peter Curtis

Dinosaur Honk! - Peter Curtis
 
The Lolly Shop #2 (Dex the Bilby) - L,B & E Hackney 

What has arrived in your mailbox lately?
 
 






 




 

Saturday, 26 February 2022

Spotlight: The Kindness of Birds by Merlinda Bobis

The Kindness of Birds
by
Merlinda Bobis
 
Publisher: Spinifex Press
 
Publication date: 4th May 2021
 
Genre: Literary Fiction
 
Pages: 256
 
Format: Paperback
 
RRP: AU $26.95 / NZ $33.95 / US $24.95
 
About the book
 
An oriole sings to a dying father. A bleeding-heart dove saves the day. A crow wakes a woman’s resolve. Owls help a boy endure isolation. Cockatoos attend the laying of the dead. Always there are birds in these linked stories that pay homage to kindness and the kinship among women and the planet. From Australia to the Philippines, across cultures and species, kindness inspires resilience amidst loss and grief. Being together ignites resistance against violence. We pull through in the company of others.
 
An anthology of 14 linked short stories that readers will find deeply moving and heartfelt.
 
Merlinda Bobis is an utterly distinctive voice in Australian letters. In our ironic and cynical times, here are stories of heartfelt feeling - fulsome, tender and unabashed - in which grief and hope are equally things with feathers - Gail Jones, award-winning novelist. 
 
About the author
 
Award-winning writer Merlinda Bobis has had four novels, six poetry books, and a collection of short stories published, and ten dramatic works performed. Her novel Locust Girl, A Lovesong received the Christina Stead Prize for Fiction in the NSW Premier's Literary Awards and the Philippine National Book Award. Her poetry collection Accidents of Composition was Highly Commended for the ACT Book of the Year Award. For her, writing is homecoming: a return to roots, a retrieval through memory, and a reckoning with loss hopefully with care and grace. 


 
 
 
 

Wednesday, 23 February 2022

Book Review: Midnight in the Snow by Karen Swan

 Midnight in the Snow
by
Karen Swan
 
An unstoppable connection. A secret that will change everything.
 
 
Publication date: 14th October 2021

Genre: Contemporary Fiction
 
Pages: 480
 
RRP: $32.99 AUD
 
Format read: Paperback
 
Source: Courtesy of the publisher
 
My review
 
Every year I eagerly await Karen Swan's Christmas release. Whilst Australia is sweltering through summer heat I can escape to somewhere cold and, most often, snowy.
 
Midnight in the Snow is set in the Austrian Alps in the lead up to Christmas Day. Journalist Clover Phillips is riding high on the success of her documentary on ex-surfing great, Cory Albright - Cory had suffered a near drowning and subsequent brain injury, whilst competing. 
 
Karen Swan highlights how close a journalist gets with the family they are working with as Clover spent many months living with Cory, his wife and their three sons.
 
Wanting to follow with an equally explosive documentary Clover decides to go after Kit Foley, Cory's nemesis and the cause of his accident. Foley has left the surfing world and is now focused on snowboarding, where he is making his name known.
 
Our two main characters, Clover and Kit, had a real hate for each other and I love a good enemies to lovers trope. However I would have liked a lot more emotion and sexual friction between them. It was there, but it was very sparse.
 
I loved the portrayal of the two main characters; Clover was determined and relentless, she wanted her story, and Kit the po-surfer turned snowboarder was hostile, insular and aloof.
It's not until you dig deep that you get the real story and Clover is prepared to dig, but what she finds even shocks her.
 
The setting imagery was, as always, amazing and I enjoyed the little peek into the professional sports world. Some of the twists I'd guessed early on but there were also some that took me by surprise. 
 
And then there are  those little snatches of poetic prose that make Swan's writing so evocative.
 
my rating 4 / 5 ⭐⭐⭐⭐

 
 About the author
 
Karen Swan is the Sunday Times top three bestselling author of twenty-one books, and her novels sell all over the world. She writes two books each year - one for the summer period and one for the Christmas season. Previous winter titles include Christmas at Tiffany's , The Christmas Party and Together by Christmas, and for summer, The Spanish Promise, The Hidden Beach and The Secret Path.
Previously a fashion editor, she lives in Sussex with her husband, three children and two dogs.

 
 
 
Click on the covers to read my review
 
          
 
          

 
 
 

Monday, 21 February 2022

Book giveaway: The Midnight Library by Matt Haig


Buy Books, Jigsaw Puzzles & Board Games Australia

The Reading Nook features some of the best books, board games and jigsaw puzzles online. The store features some of the best selling fiction and non-fiction books in Australia. They also have an extensive range of puzzles online Australia with great brands like Ravensburger, Clementoni, Mindbogglers, Holdson and many others. Their board games collections feature some of the best selling games in Australia like Cards Against Humanity, Monopoly, Articulate, Cluedo and many other leading games. They offer 1 day dispatch process times with a low shipping rate of $9.95 to any Australian address - shipped from their warehouse just outside of Sydney on the Central Coast. 
 
Thanks to the generosity of The Reading Nook online bookstore I have a great #giveaway today for 1 of 2 paperback copies of:
 
The Midnight Library
by
Matt Haig
 

 Blurb

'Between life and death there is a library, and within that library, the shelves go on forever. Every book provides a chance to try another life you could have lived. To see how things would be if you had made other choices... Would you have done anything different, if you had the chance to undo your regrets?'

A dazzling novel about all the choices that go into a life well lived, from the internationally bestselling author of Reasons to Stay Alive and How To Stop Time.

Somewhere out beyond the edge of the universe there is a library that contains an infinite number of books, each one the story of another reality. One tells the story of your life as it is, along with another book for the other life you could have lived if you had made a different choice at any point in your life. While we all wonder how our lives might have been, what if you had the chance to go to the library and see for yourself? Would any of these other lives truly be better?

In The Midnight Library, Matt Haig's enchanting novel, Nora Seed finds herself faced with this decision. Faced with the possibility of changing her life for a new one, following a different career, undoing old breakups, realizing her dreams of becoming a glaciologist; she must search within herself as she travels through the Midnight Library to decide what is truly fulfilling in life, and what makes it worth living in the first place.
 
 

 
Giveaway:
Thanks to The Reading Nook I have two copies of The Midnight Library to giveaway.

Enter via the form below. (Open to Australian addresses only). Entries close at midnight on 28th February 2022. 
 
This giveaway is now closed and the winners were announced HERE
 
 

Winners of a copy of Murder Most Fancy by Kellie McCourt announced!!

 

A huge thank you to everyone who entered my giveaway for 1 of 2 copies of Murder Most Fancy.  I had a massive 329 entries and I am trying to source more giveaways for my subscribers. The giveaway closed on the 19th February and the winners were randomly selected (using Random org) from all correct entries. 


Congratulations to........   Anita & Jo Burke

 

 The winners have been notified and have seven days to provide a mailing address.

 Please look under the giveaway tab for more chances to win great books.

I have another giveaway running now for



Thursday, 17 February 2022

Book Review: Who Sleuthed It? Edited by Lindy Cameron

 Who Sleuthed It?
edited by Lindy Cameron
 
Fingers and feelers and paws and wings,

Solving thrillers and chillers and secretive things!
 
 
Publication date: 1st September 2021 

Genre: Crime Anthology
 
Pages: 340
 
RRP: $29.95 AUD
 
Format read: Paperback
 
Source: Courtesy of the publisher 
 
My review
 
I do enjoy anthologies! I like that I can read a short story here and there and it's instant gratification.
 
Who Sleuthed It? is a collection of stories connected by the theme of animal sleuths. 
 
It did include a wide range of sub-genres within the crime genre and I am not a fan of paranormal however there were 19 stories in all so don't be put off by the fact some may be a genre you don't read. A short story may also be a good way to give something different a try.
 
All stories had a mystery at their core. I enjoyed more the stories where the animals retained their animal mannerisms, but could communicate with each other, over the stories where the animal characters took on human mannerisms.
Many of the stories included an element of humour which always appeals to me. Because the stories are so short it is quick to move on to the next one if one doesn't appeal.
Overall my rating averaged out to 4 stars over the 19 stories and there were plenty of 5 star reads in there.
 
Who Sleuthed It? is a fun collection of stories that will appeal to animal lovers and crime readers alike. I also discovered a few new authors that I am now keen to seek out their full length novels. 
 
My rating 4 / 5 ⭐⭐⭐⭐

 
About the authors
 
List of contributing authors. There may be a few names here you already know.
Louisa Bennet - Australian
Lindy Cameron - Australian
Kat Clay - Australian
Livia Day - Australian
Jack Fennell - Irish
David Greagg - Australian
Kerry Greenwood - Australian
Narrelle M. Harris - Australian
Craig Hilton - Australian
Meg Keneally - Australian
C.J. McGumbleberry - American
Chuck McKenzie - Australian
Atlin Merrick - American
Dr. L.J.M. Owen - Australian
GV Pearce - British
Vikki Petraitis - Australian
Fin J Ross - Australian
Tor Roxburgh - Australian
Elizabeth Ann Scarborough - American