Blog Tour/Book Review: Pilgrim by Louise Hall

Pilgrim Blog Tour Poster

I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for Pilgrim by Louise Hall.  You can read my review below.  Thanks to Anne at Random Things Tours for inviting me to participate in the tour and to Mercier Press for my review copy.


PilgrimAbout the Book

In Dublin, fourteen-year-old Jen and her father, Charlie, are struggling to cope with the death of their mother/wife. Charlie, in particular, seems to have given up on life. When Jen’s aunt, Suzanne, convinces them to go on a pilgrimage to a strange village in Yugoslavia, there is hope that some solace or healing may be brought to their broken lives.

On their arrival, however, they find a village in upheaval. An influx of pilgrims have swarmed into the village, each looking for their own miracle. Then there are the local police, who aim to suppress this so-called `revolution’. Amid all this, Jen makes a friend, Iva – one of the children who claims to have seen the Virgin Mary.

Told with a deep humanity and grace, Pilgrim is a story about a man who feels he has nothing to live for, and a daughter who is determined to prove him wrong. A nuanced and moving exploration of grief and faith.

Format: Paperback (288 pp.)    Publisher: Mercier Press
Published: 14th September 2018   Genre: Literary Fiction

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Pilgrim on Goodreads


My Review

Pilgrim takes the reader on an emotional as well as an actual journey to a small village in Yugoslavia where six children have experienced a vision of the Virgin Mary. It comes at a time (the early 1980s) of turbulence in that country. Alternating between the points of view of a few key characters, including Iva, one of the six children, and the Franciscan priest who tries to protect them, the book explores the experiences of the pilgrims who flock to the village. The political upheaval in Yugoslavia and its impact on the inhabitants also features but very much as background. Pilgrim is more a book about people than events.

I liked the device the author often used of allowing the reader to experience the events of the same day but from different points of view – Iva and Jen, Jen and Charlie, and so on. I also enjoyed some of the characters created by the author who populate the background of Dublin. For example, the ‘smelly butcher’ (as remembered by Charlie) or Boris the travel agent (as encountered by Louis).

There’s some great close observation of even those with mere walk-on parts such as a newspaper vendor at the seaside recalled by Sarah’s sister, Suzanne.  ‘Along this strip there was always a man with a white badger streak in the centre of his coal-black hair who sold newspapers. He placed stones on top of the newspapers to stop the pages fluttering in the light wind and he sat on a grey plastic crate with his nose stuck in a battered book.’ These reminiscences by the main characters, such as Jen’s adventures with her childhood friend Francis, provide interesting side roads for the reader to explore. Temporary detours, if you like, from the main storyline.

The author really captures an Irish lilt in the speech and thoughts of Charlie especially. Having said that, Charlie is the character I struggled most to empathize with. His predominant characteristics seemed to be self-pity and self-absorption. His lack of regard for his daughter, Jen – struggling with her own grief, after all – even for her basic safety and welfare was staggering at times. I often had to remind myself who was the adult and who the child! However, I guess the author was trying to show what grief and loss can do to a person. And I was forced to revise my view of him towards the end of the book. There’s often more to a story – and to a person – than you can know.

All the characters the reader encounters in the book have had tragedy in their lives, often the sudden and unexpected loss of a loved one. Although their response to these tragic events varies, for all of them it has been life-changing. One might expect a book in which the characters have experienced such sadness to be sad as well. Although it undoubtedly is in parts, the overwhelming message I took from the book is one of hope – for redemption, for forgiveness, for release from the burden of guilt and for the possibility of starting over again. Oh, and never take for granted those you love because everything can change in a heartbeat.

I received a review copy courtesy of publishers, Mercier Press, and Random Things Tours.

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In three words: Emotional, spiritual, intense

Try something similar…The Things We Cannot Say by Kelly Rimmer (read my review here)


LouiseHallAbout the Author

Louise Hall is from Malahide, Co. Dublin. She has previously published two works of non-fiction, Medjugorje: What it Means to Me and Medjugorje and Me: A Collection of Stories from Across the World.

Her fiction has been published in The Irish Times and been shortlisted for numerous competitions, such as the RTÉ Guide/Penguin Short Story Award, the Colm Tóibín International Short Story Competition and the Jonathan Swift Creative Writing Awards. Pilgrim is her debut novel.

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Blog Tour/Book Review: The Golden Hour (The Lady Evelyn Mysteries #4) by Malia Zaidi

The Golden Hour Blog Tour

I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for the latest book in ‘The Lady Evelyn Mysteries’ series by Malia Zaidi, The Golden Hour.

Thanks to Emma at damppebbles blog tours for inviting me to participate in the tour and for my review copy.


The Golden HourAbout the Book

London, 1927. Lady Evelyn Carlisle has barely arrived in London when familial duty calls her away again. Her cousin Gemma is desperate for help with her ailing mother before her imminent wedding, which Evelyn knew nothing about! Aunt Agnes in tow, she journeys to Scotland, expecting to find Malmo Manor in turmoil.

To her surprise, her Scottish family has been keeping far more secrets than the troubled state of their matriarch. Adding to the tension in the house a neighbour has opened his home, Elderbrooke Park, as a retreat for artistic veterans of the Great War. This development does not sit well with everyone in the community. Is the suspicion towards the residents a catalyst for murder?

A tragedy at Elderbrooke Park’s May Day celebration awakens Evelyn’s sleuthing instinct, which is strengthened when the story of another unsolved death emerges, connected to her own family. What she uncovers on her quest to expose the truth will change several lives forever, including her own.

With the shadow of history looming over her, Evelyn must trust in her instinct and ability to comb through the past to understand the present, before the murderer can stop her and tragedy strikes again.

Format: Paperback, ebook (pp.)    Publisher:
Published: 26th March 2019 Genre: Historical Fiction, Mystery, Crime

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The Golden Hour (The Lady Evelyn Mysteries #4) on Goodreads


My Review

I can reassure readers who, like me, have not read any of the previous books in the series that The Golden Hour works perfectly well as a standalone read although there are a few references to events (some significant) in earlier books. However, there are some surprises of a personal nature awaiting even Lady Evelyn in The Golden Hour.

Evelyn makes a spirited heroine with instincts naturally attuned to detection. She’s observant, perceptive, and inquisitive, not to mention determined, independent-minded and fearless. It turns out she’s going to need all those qualities when a murder takes place in the grounds of a country house, Elderbrooke Park, near to Malmo Manor where members of Evelyn’s extended family have gathered ahead of the wedding of her cousin, Gemma.

Like all good mysteries, there is an extensive cast of possible suspects including the residents of Elderbrooke Park (many of whom bear the physical and psychological scars of war), the inhabitants of the nearby village of Falkland (not all of whom are keen on their new neighbours), servants and even members of Evelyn’s own family. There are a range of potential motives as well: blackmail, unrequited love, jealousy and family feuds, to name but a few.

The story moves along at fairly leisurely speed with plenty of time for philosophical musings, lush descriptions of landscape and weather, and for Evelyn to share the results of her investigations with other characters. The pace of the book is therefore best suited to those who enjoy a gentle country stroll rather than a headlong gallop.

Personally, I could have done with more of the delicious Daniel, Evelyn’s romantic interest, who frankly sounds like quite a catch. Her concern that the future of their relationship might mean giving up her cherished independence reminded me a little of the courtship between Dorothy L Sayers’ Harriet Vane and Lord Peter Wimsey in Gaudy Night.

The Golden Hour is an engaging historical mystery which doesn’t however shy away from tackling more serious subjects such as the legacy of war – in this case, the First World War – on those involved even nearly twenty years later.

I received a review copy courtesy of damppebbles Blog Tours and the author.

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In three words: Engaging, gentle, mystery

Try something similar…Lady Helena Investigates (Scott-De Quincy Mysteries #1) by Jane Steen (read my review here)


Version 2About the Author

Malia Zaidi is the author of the ‘Lady Evelyn Mysteries’. She studied at the University of Pittsburgh and at the University of Oxford. Having grown up in Germany, she currently lives in Washington DC, though through her love of reading, she resides vicariously (if temporarily) in countries around the world.

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Website  ǀ  Facebook  ǀ  Twitter  ǀ  Blog ǀ Goodreads

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