#TopTenTuesday Books I’ll Be Reading Soon

Top Ten Tuesday newTop Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme created by The Broke and the Bookish and now hosted by Jana at That Artsy Reader Girl.

The rules are simple:

Each Tuesday, Jana assigns a new topic. Create your own Top Ten list that fits that topic – putting your unique spin on it if you want. Everyone is welcome to join but please link back to That Artsy Reader Girl in your own Top Ten Tuesday post. Add your name to the Linky widget on that day’s post so that everyone can check out other bloggers’ lists. Or if you don’t have a blog, just post your answers as a comment.

20 Books of Summer 2019This week is a Freebie with participants asked to come up with their own topic. I’ve chosen to look ahead to the nine (yes, only nine!) books left on my 20 Books of Summer list, the annual challenge hosted by Cathy at 746Books . I’ve added one – The Wanderers – which is the previous book to The Redeemed in Tim Pears’ The West Country Trilogy.

  • The Truth Must Dazzle Gradually by Helen Cullen – described as ” a celebration of the complex, flawed and stubbornly optimistic human heart”
  • The Gap in the Curtain by John Buchan – five people are given a glimpse of the future but how will that knowledge affect them?
  • A Prince of the Captivity by John Buchan – the story of the courage of a man imprisoned for a crime he did not commit
  • The Wanderers by Tim Pears – continuing the story of Leo Sercombe begun in The Horseman
  • The Redeemed by Tim Pears – the final book in the trilogy, shortlisted for The Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction 2020
  • A House of Ghosts by W. C. Ryan – described as “a gripping mystery with a classic feel…And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie meets The Silent Companions by Laura Purcell”
  • The Music Shop by Rachel Joyce – a novel about learning how to listen and how to feel, about second chances and choosing to be brave despite the odds
  • Liar by Ayelet Gundar-Goshen – how one mistake can have a thousand consequences
  • Small Great Things by Jodi Picoult – described as a book that tackles “race, privilege, prejudice, justice, and compassion – and doesn’t offer easy answers”
  • Those Who Are Loved by Victoria Hislop – historical novel set against the backdrop of the German occupation of Greece in WW2, the subsequent civil war and a military dictatorship

#BookReview The Storm by Amanda Jennings @HQStories

9780008287061About the Book

To the outside world Hannah married the perfect man. Behind the closed doors of their imposing house it’s a very different story. Nathan controls everything Hannah does. He chooses her clothes, checks her receipts, and keeps her passport locked away. But why does she let him?

Years before, in the midst of a relentless storm, the tragic events of one night changed everything and Hannah has been living with the consequences every since. Keeping Nathan happy. Doing as she’s told.

But the past is about to catch up with them…

Format: ebook (412 pages)            Publisher: HQ Stories
Publication date: 23rd July 2020 Genre: Contemporary fiction, thriller

Find The Storm on Goodreads

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


My Review

I really enjoyed Amanda Jennings’ previous book, The Cliff House, and her beloved Cornwall is once again the location for her latest novel, The Storm. Set mainly around the fishing village of Newlyn and moving between the present day and twenty years earlier, the reader witnesses how the lives of a number of people were changed by the dramatic events of one night in 1998. Fragments of that eventful night are glimpsed in the prologue but the full picture will not become clear until the end of the book.

For Hannah, the events of that night led to her marriage to Nathan, a kind of Faustian bargain she entered into to protect others. Nathan’s obsessive jealousy has seen him control every aspect of Hannah’s life. She steels herself to complicity in this out of guilt – “Our marriage is punishment for what I did” – and for the sake of their son, Alex. So she plays the part expected of her and recites her lines in order to keep the peace. Alex is pretty much the only source of joy in Hannah’s life along with her best friend, Vicky.

Nathan is one disturbing individual. Outwardly he’s a model citizen and pillar of the community, but inside he’s something quite different. As Hannah remarks, he’s “my very own Jekyll and Hyde”. A damaged individual, a traumatic event in Nathan’s childhood explains, if not excuses, his actions towards Hannah.

In the scenes set in 1998, the author vividly depicts the back-breaking work of the six-man crew aboard a small trawler and the dangers they face on a daily basis. Taking such risks out of economic necessity, a safe return to harbour is never guaranteed but when it occurs, the crew seek release through drink, and sometimes drugs, in the local pub. When the Atlantic storm of the title hits the trawler, the awesome force of the sea is evident. “Six men, no more than specks of dust on an ocean so powerful and unpredictable, so savage, they could be swallowed up in the blink of an eye.” The consequences of the storm will change lives forever.

I’m not sure which element I found more compelling: the chilling portrait of Hannah and Nathan’s toxic relationship or the scenes set on the storm-lashed trawler.  The Storm is an intensely atmospheric and compelling drama that shows even the most carefully guarded secrets have a way of coming to the surface. The final lines sent chills down my spine.

I received an advance review copy courtesy of HQ Stories via NetGalley.

In three words: Dark, intense, gripping

Try something similar: The Other You by J. S. Monroe

Follow this blog via Bloglovin


Amanda JenningsAbout the Author

Amanda Jennings lives in Oxfordshire with her husband, three daughters, and a menagerie of animals. She studied History of Art at Cambridge and before writing her first book, was a researcher at the BBC.

With a deep fascination for the far-reaching effects of trauma, her books focus on the different ways people find to cope with loss, as well as the moral struggles her protagonists face. When she isn’t writing she can usually be found walking the dog. Her favourite place to be is up a mountain or beside the sea.

Connect with Amanda
Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram