#BookReview When the Music Stops by Joe Heap @fictionpubteam

A note from Joe:

I owe this book to my grandparents, John and Jean Sands, for sharing the stories that inspired it. In many ways their story is more remarkable than the one I have written.

At a summer season in Ramsgate, 1959, two ice skaters held a party. My grandfather, a Glaswegian saxophonist who would rather have gone to the pub, was convinced by a comedian on the same bill to come along. My grandmother, another one of the ice skaters, sat down next to him and spilt her drink in his lap. Though she has since denied it, her first words of note to him were ‘Oh no, not another Scot.’

Nobody could have guessed how much would spin off that moment, myself and this book included. Here are a few pictures of them.”

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9780008293208About the Book

This is the story of Ella. And Robert. And of all the things they should have said, but never did.

What have you been up to?’
I shrug, ‘Just existing, I guess.’
‘Looks like more than just existing.’
Robert gestures at the baby, the lifeboat, the ocean.
‘All right, not existing. Surviving.’
He laughs, not unkindly. ‘Sounds grim.’
‘It wasn’t so bad, really. But I wish you’d been there.’

Through seven key moments and seven key people their journey intertwines. From the streets of Glasgow during WW2 to the sex, drugs and rock n’ roll of London in the 60s and beyond, this is a story of love and near misses. Of those who come in to our lives and leave it too soon. And of those who stay with you forever…

Format: Hardcover (384 pages)           Publisher: Harper Collins
Publication date: 29th October 2020 Genre: Contemporary Fiction, Romance

Find When the Music Stops on Goodreads

Purchase links*
Amazon UK | Hive (supporting UK bookshops)
*link provided for convenience not as part of an affiliate programme


My Review

The book’s structure, revisiting seven key moments and people in Ella’s life, was, according to the author, inspired by the ‘Seven Ages of Man’ speech from Shakespeare’s As You Like It. However, as Joe Heap also writes, “This is a book about music, inspired by music” so cleverly incorporated into the story are the seven modes that have been part of musical notation since ancient times.

In When the Music Stops, each of these modes is represented by a song in a music book Ella acquires when she first takes up the guitar. Although other elements of her memory have faded by the time we first meet her as an old woman – alone, in rather strange circumstances – the tunes are still at her fingertips, evoking memories of significant stages in her life – and the people who shared them with her. As she muses, “There are seven songs. I have to play all of them, though I don’t know what will come at the end. I just have to play them.”

The ability of music to evoke memories is just one of the fascinating concepts explored in the book, along with the nature of memory itself and how we experience the passing of time. I’ll leave others to explain Einstein’s theories on the latter but I liked the metaphor Robert, Ella’s friend since childhood, employs. He compares time to a long-playing record. While you’re listening to the second verse of a song, he explains, the first verse is still there but you’re just not listening to it anymore.

As the reader learns, Ella’s life has been punctuated by moments of loss, often signalled by that thing we’ve probably all come to dread – the unexpected early morning or late night telephone call. Robert’s earlier metaphor is applicable here too. As he confides to Ella about a person they both knew, “I don’t think she’s really gone… I just think we can’t see her anymore.”

Another key theme of the book is that of the missed opportunities in life, especially between people like Ella and Robert. ‘The Road Not Taken’ of Robert Frost’s poem, as it were. Their encounters over the years are populated by falsely reassuring thoughts such as “There will be other chances” and fateful hesitations, “The door of possibility stays open, waiting for her to walk through, but she stays put”.

I admired the way the author recreated the atmosphere of each stage on the journey through Ella’s life, referencing the clothing, the television programmes or even the food of the time: the school playground gift of tablet (a sweet similar to fudge for you non-Scots out there) or a corned beef and pickle sandwich prepared for a picnic.

The standout section for me, entitled ‘The Rebel’, was Ella’s experiences as a session musician in 1960s London, rubbing shoulders with many famous, or soon to be famous, bands of the period. (In his acknowledgements, Joe mentions Carol Kaye, “a trailblazing female musician” who played guitar and bass on many hit records and was the inspiration for Ella.) I also found the section entitled ‘The Matron’ particularly moving.

At one point in the book, a character mentions ‘fantastical thinking’ and I think that’s a great description of the premise of this clever but very touching novel. At the online book launch, Joe Heap mentioned fantasy as making up some of his own early reading – books by authors such as Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman – and it’s easy to see that influence in elements of the book. However, more than anything, When the Music Stops is an emotional story of love, loss and the power of the human spirit. I think it would make a great book club choice.

With its gorgeous cover, this is one of those occasions when I feel I’ve slightly missed out by opting for a digital version of a book.  So I may just have to treat myself and help out an independent bookshop through Lockdown 2.0 in the process…

In three words: Imaginative, insightful, heartfelt

Try something similar: Fred’s Funeral by Sandy Day

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Joe Heap Author PicAbout the Author

Joe Heap was born in 1986 and grew up in Bradford, the son of two teachers. His debut novel, The Rules of Seeing, won Best Debut at the Romantic Novel of the Year Awards in 2019 and was shortlisted for the Books Are My Bag Reader Awards. Joe lives in London with his girlfriend, their two sons and a cat who wishes they would get out of the house more often.

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#BlogTour #BookReview Born of No Woman by Franck Bouysse @RandomTTours @wnbooks

FINAL Born of No Woman BT Poster

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for Born Of No Woman by Franck Bouysse, translated by Lara Vergnaud. My thanks to Anne at Random Things Tours for inviting me to take part in the tour and to Weidenfeld & Nicolson for my digital review copy.


Born Of No WomanAbout the Book

Nineteenth-century rural France. Before he is called to bless the body of a woman at the nearby asylum, Father Gabriel receives a strange, troubling confession: hidden under the woman’s dress he will find the notebooks in which she confided the abuses she suffered and the twisted motivations behind them.

And so Rose’s terrible story comes to light: sold as a teenage girl to a rich man, hidden away in a old manor house deep in the woods and caught in a perverse web, manipulated by those society considers her betters.

A girl whose only escape is to capture her life – in all its devastation and hope – in the pages of her diary…

Born Of No Woman has won every prize awarded by readers in France, including the Grand Prix Des Lectrices Elle, one of the most important prizes in France. It has also won The Prix Des Libraires (given by booksellers), Prix Psychologies Magazine and and the Prix Babelio.

Format: Hardcover (368 pages)         Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson
Publication date: 21st October 2021 Genre: Historical Fiction, Literature in Translation

Find Born Of No Woman on Goodreads


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Bookshop.org
Disclosure: If you buy a book via the above link, I may earn a commission from Bookshop.org, whose fees support independent bookshops

Hive | Amazon UK
Links provided for convenience only, not as part of an affiliate programme


My Review

Born Of No Woman is a powerful story of injustice, suffering and the cruelty that human beings can inflict on one another. But it is also a love story, a mystery and an exploration of how people deal with – or attempt to deal with – trauma; how, although seemingly powerless, they can reclaim some power over their lives and destinies.  For Rose, it is writing that gives her the strength to carry on despite everything she has endured.  As she says, ‘All that’s keeping me alive now is writing, or rather, if there was some word that meant to both scream and write, that would be better’. It’s also about power; the power men are able to exert over women, and the power the rich can exert over the poor.

An interesting aspect of the book for me was how many of the characters are struggling with guilt or regret, often misplaced. Although believing initially that he was faced with no other choice if he was to save his family from penury, Onésime, Rose’s father, is soon filled with regret at his actions and attempts to put things right. Rose’s mother feels a sense of guilt that she was able to provide her husband with only daughters – ‘the promise she hadn’t been able to keep; for in the end, their misfortunes had sprouted there, in her repeated inability to bring a son into the world. Everything that had led precisely to their loss’.

Similarly, the man Rose meets soon after arriving at the house of the person she will learn to refer to as the Master’ (described chillingly as ‘One who never lets go of his prey’) regrets she does not heed his warning to leave. He feels a sense of guilt at having stood by and done nothing to stop the terrible things that have happened in the past and, he feels sure, will happen again. On the other hand, the people who should feel guilt – the Master and his mother – show no sign of it although they have more reason than most given the evil they inflict on others, in particular Rose.

The book has the feeling of a dark fairy tale: Les Forges, the castle-like home of the Master, the Master’s mother playing the role of an evil Queen, and the dense and ancient forest that surrounds Les Forges. ‘Veined wood, riddled by thorn scars, covered with ants swarming in search of honeydew. Sick leaves, stained with black, felted in white, the green dissolved.’  There are also echoes of Jane Eyre in the existence of a locked room whose macabre secrets will eventually be revealed.

Born Of No Woman is not an easy read as there are some harrowing scenes. What makes it bearable is that, alongside the brutality and cruelty, there are also examples of tenderness.  Strangely enough, at the end of the book I was left with a feeling of hope and a sense that evil and injustice will be punished.

In three words: Powerful, intense, chilling

Try something similar: The Bride Price by Buchi Emecheta

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Franck Bouysse Author PicAbout the Author

Franck Bouysse is a French author. His novels Grossir le ciel in 2014, Plateau in 2016 and Glaise in 2017 have met with wide success and won a vast array of literary awards. Previously a teacher of biology and horticulture, Bouysse lives in the south-west of France.

Connect with Franck
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