Monday 13 January 2020

Mailbox Monday - January 13th

Mailbox Monday is a meme started by Marcia of To Be Continued. Mailbox Monday is the gathering place for readers to share the books that came in their mailbox during the last week. It now has a permanent home at the Mailbox Monday blog. Head over and check out other books received during the last week. 


Happy Monday!


I haven't managed to post a mailbox Monday for some time and this is my first one for 2020. Today I have listed the books I received as gifts from family and friends.

We had a busy Christmas period with all the children home for Christmas day lunch. The day was so busy I didn't even manage to take a photo.
My eldest daughter announced her engagement in the new year which was very exciting for the whole family.
Dot starts school in February, so only a few more weeks and she will starting a whole new adventure. Her introduction to preschool didn't go too well so we all have our fingers crossed for those first few weeks of school. Ditto also starts on his new adventure as a preschool boy so it will be very quiet at home soon.

Books received from  family and friends:

The Model Wife by Tricia Stringer
Natalie King's life is full. Some might say too full. With her teaching job, a farm to run, three grown daughters who have not quite got a handle on things, a reserved husband and a demanding mother-in-law, most days she is too busy to think about whether she is happy. But her life has meaning, doesn't it? After all, she is the one person everyone depends upon.

But when an odd gift from her mother-in-law - an old book in the form of stern and outdated advice for young wives - surfaces again, it brings with it memories she thought she had buried deep. Has this insidious little book exerted some kind of hold over her? Could it be that in her attempts to be a loving wife and mother, she no longer knows who she is?




The Cottage at Rosella Cove by Sandie Docker
LOST
Nicole has left her city life for the sleepy town of Rosella Cove, renting the old cottage by the water. She plans to keep to herself - but when she uncovers a hidden box of wartime love letters, she realises she's not the
first person living in this cottage to hide secrets and pain.

FOUND
Ivy's quiet life in Rosella Cove is tainted by the events of World War II, with ramifications felt for many years to come. But one night a drifter appears and changes everything. Perhaps his is the soul she's meant to save.

FORGOTTEN
Charlie is too afraid of his past to form any lasting ties in the cove. He knows he must make amends for his tragic deeds long ago, but he can't do it alone. Maybe the new tenant in the cottage will help him fulfil a promise and find the redemption he isn't sure he deserves.


The Kookaburra Creek Cafe by Sandie Docker
THE PAST
For Hattie, the cafe has been her refuge for the last fifty years – her second chance at a happy ending after her dreams of being a star were shattered. But will the ghosts of her past succeed in destroying everything she’s worked so hard to build?

THE PRESENT

For Alice, the cafe is her livelihood. After Hattie took her in as a teenager, Alice has slowly forged a quiet life as the cafe’s manager (and chief cupcake baker). But with so many tragedies behind her, is it too late for Alice’s story to have a happy ending?

THE FUTURE

For Becca, a teenager in trouble, the cafe could be the new start she yearns for. That is, if she can be persuaded to stop running from her secrets. Can Becca find a way to believe in the kindness of strangers, and accept that this small town could be the place where she finally belongs? 

 The Wolf Hour by Sarah Myles

Thirty-year-old Tessa Lowell has a PhD in psychology and is working in Uganda to research the effects of PTSD and war on child soldiers. She joins a delegation travelling across the Congolese border, deep into the African bush, for peace talks with Joseph Kony, notorious leader of the Lord's Resistance Army. 

At the camp Tessa meets thirteen-year-old Francis, already an experienced soldier and survivor of shocking violence. The talks stall, and the camp is attacked by other rebels who take Tessa. Isolated in an increasingly volatile situation, she tries to form a bond with Francis.

In Melbourne, Tessa's parents are notified of the kidnapping, but learn there is little that government agencies can do. Desperate, they contact their son Stephen, an astute if manipulative businessman based in Cape Town. He agrees to search for his sister but has other reasons to contact the rebel forces.
 


The Wife and the Widow by Christian White

 Set against the backdrop of an eerie island town in the dead of winter, The Wife and The Widow is an unsettling thriller told from two perspectives: Kate, a widow whose grief is compounded by what she learns about her dead husband’s secret life; and Abby, an island local whose world is turned upside when she’s forced to confront the evidence of her husband’s guilt. But nothing on this island is quite as it seems, and only when these women come together can they discover the whole story about the men in their lives. Brilliant and beguiling, The Wife and The Widow takes you to a cliff edge and asks the question: how well do we really know the people we love?  

Books received from the publisher:

 The Land Beyond the Sea by Sharon Penman

1172. The Kingdom of Jerusalem, also known as 'Outremer', the land beyond the sea. Outremer was a young realm, one baptized in blood when the men of the First Crusade captured Jerusalem from the Saracens in 1099. Those crusaders who stayed had to adapt to an utterly new world, a land of blazing heat and exotic customs and enemies who were also neighbors.
Balian d'Ibelin had long enjoyed a relationship of mutual respect with Saladin. But Saladin was set upon taking Jerusalem by storm, seeing it as a blood debt, retribution for the massacre in 1099. Defeating Saladin would have been a challenge for any king, but while Baldwin IV was intelligent, educated, charismatic, courageous, and dedicated to the welfare and protection of his people, he was also doomed by his affliction with leprosy. However, he fought his disease as fiercely as he fought the Saracens, though, and when he learned that Saladin was planning to invade Outremer, he won a remarkable victory over a much larger Saracen army at Montisgard in 1177; Saladin himself barely escaped capture. Balian took part in that battle, too, for he was loyal to his young, dying king. Eventually, Balian's finest hour would come, for he convinced Saladin to accept a peaceful surrender . . .
 


 A Murder at Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey
  
 Also published as: The Widows of Malabar Hill & A Murder on Malabar HIll
Bombay, 1921: Perveen Mistry, the daughter of a respected Zoroastrian family, has just joined her father's law firm, becoming one of the first female lawyers in India. Armed with a legal education from Oxford, Perveen also has a tragic personal history that makes her especially devoted to championing and protecting women's rights. 
Mistry Law is handling the will of Mr. Omar Farid, a wealthy Muslim mill owner who has left three widows behind. But as Perveen goes through the papers, she notices something strange: all three have signed over their inheritance to a charity. What will they live on if they forefeet what their husband left them? Perveen is suspicious. 
The Farid widows live in purdah: strict seclusion, never leaving the women's quarters or speaking to any men. Are they being taken advantage of by an unscrupulous guardian? Perveen tries to investigate and realizes her instincts about the will were correct when tensions escalate to murder. It's her responsibility to figure out what really happened on Malabar Hill, and to ensure that nobody is in further danger.  

What Books did your postman deliver, or you downloaded, this week?

Post a link to your Mailbox Monday or simply list your books in the comments below.
   

   

Sunday 12 January 2020

Book Review: Cassandra's Secret by Frances Garrood

Cassandra's Secret
by
Frances Garrood



Publisher: Sapere Books 
Publication date: 10th May 2018
Genre: Contemporary Fiction
Pages: 319
Format read: eBook
Source: Courtesy of the publisher

1960s England

Cassandra Fitzpatrick’s family isn’t quite like everybody else’s: her house is always full to bursting with the various misfits her mother houses as lodgers.

The creative and chaotic household is all she has ever known and loved, until something awful happens that changes everything.

Cass loves her mother deeply, but, as she gets older, she becomes more and more aware of her flaws.

Will Cass have to distance herself from her family to find happiness? Or is she destined to follow in her mother’s footsteps?

As Cass reflects on her memories, she must lay the ghosts of the past to rest and make peace with the secrets that have haunted her adult life…  



Cassandra’s Secret is story of an unconventional family. Cass and her brother Lucas are raised by their single mother with an array of misfits and drifters coming into and out of their house. There was Uncle Rupert who lived in the attic, a procession of lodgers who rented the basement and were simply called The Lodger and Greta, an exile from Switzerland, who had become chief tea maker for the family.

Told in the first person Cass sits by her mother’s death bed and contemplates her life, introducing the reader to her eclectic mother who had a love for men and a good party. Cass and her brother grew up with relatively no rules, just a love for life and adventure. An incident when Cass was 14 has left her more damaged than she realised.

This was quite an interesting story about the free and easy upbringing Cass and Lucas had. Cass’s mum seemed to have bipolar, her highs  were high and her lowes were low and at times Cass had to become the parent.
Garrood shows how over the years an incident of abuse had a dramatic effect on Cass’s life. There is quite a bit of humour in the story and even if Cass didn’t always agree with her mother’s actions they had a strong bond and she looked back over the years fondly.

Cassandra’s Secret was a pleasant read, all the characters were likeable and with themes of death, promiscuity, single parenthood, abuse and depression the topics are only lightly touched on so it never becomes a heavy read. 


                           🌟🌟🌟🌟


My rating  4/5



  Frances Garrood's main career was nursing, but she also trained and worked for many years as a relationship counsellor with Relate. Widowed in 1992, she re-married and now lives with her husband in Wiltshire, where she enjoys riding her horse in the beautiful Pewsey Vale, reading, writing, and keeping up with her grandchildren. She also writes regularly to a prisoner on Texas Death Row.

Frances first started writing as a child; mainly poetry, but there was one horrific novel (mercifully, never finished) in which a woman gives birth to a hideously deformed child in a thunderstorm. While she was bringing up her four children, she began writing and selling short stories to magazines before the enforced immobility following a fractured spine gave her the time to tackle her first novel.

All her books are very strongly relationship-based. Her writing has also been affected by her widowhood, and her books sometimes include issues of death and bereavement. Strangely (and not by design) they all seem to include pet animal funerals (not a subject which
normally occupies my mind!)

 



Saturday 11 January 2020

Books and Bites Bingo - Category 1 #BooksandBitesBingo2020

This bingo challenge is with Facebook group Books and Bites with Monique Mulligan

I've only read and reviewed one book so far this year so I will need to double up on my bingo choices.

This week I will be completing the 'Debut Novel' category.

A Debut Novel

For this category I have chosen "Such a Fun Age".  


This was an interesting book about race, class, white saviour complex and do-gooders.  However it also had themes of growing up and at 25 Emira was still uncertain what she wanted to do with her life. She was currently hired as a babysitter, a job that was usually associated with 16 year olds. A roller coaster series of events cause Emira to take stock of her life and force her to take action. This is the debut novel of Kiley Reid. I'm looking forward to seeing what Kiley comes out with next.

You can read my full review here  


#BooksandBitesBingo2020