#BookReview Jane’s Country Year by Malcolm Saville @KateHandheld

Jane's Country YearAbout the Book

‘At last she reached the brow of the hill … now the country opened out below her and she looked down into a wide and lovely valley … Still patched with snow the little fields spread like a carpet below her and here and there a farmhouse with barns and golden ricks was clearly seen. Across the plain ran, straight as a ruler, a railway line and she saw a toy train puffing and crawling across the picture.’

Malcolm Saville’s classic novel is about eleven-year old Jane’s discovery of nature and country life during a year spent convalescing on her uncle’s farm, after having been dangerously ill in post-war London. This deeply-felt novel was written while Saville was extending his range as a writer, alongside his very successful Lone Pine adventure series, and nature anthologies for children.

Inspired by the experiences of Saville’s own god-daughter, this marvellous novel is full of the wonder of discovery, as well the happiness of regaining health, making friends, and learning to love the natural world. The novel is also a record of rural England eighty years ago, written by one of the great twentieth century English nature writers.

Format: Paperback (237 pages)         Publisher: Handheld Press
Publication date: 18th January 2022 Genre: Modern Classics, Children’s Books, Nature

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My Review

Handheld Press has built a deserved reputation for publishing new editions of forgotten fiction and books by lost authors. Jane’s Country Year is no exception being the first new edition of the book since it was first published in 1946.

As with all books in the Handheld Classics series, it has a fascinating introduction, in this case by Hazel Sheeky Bird of the University of Newcastle. As well as providing background information about Malcolm Saville and his other works, Hazel Sheeky Bird explores some of the themes of the book and puts it into historical context. She notes the book’s ‘unsentimental attitude to the natural world’ and its place in what has been described as ‘didactic fiction’, in other words fiction intended to educate as well as entertain.  The book also contains useful notes by Handheld’s founder and commissioning editor, Kate Macdonald, in which she explains some terms in the book that may be unfamiliar to modern readers. My favourites were ‘warm knickers’ and ‘licked his pencil’.

Jane's Country YearFrom the moment Jane arrives at Moor End, the farm owned by her Uncle William and Aunt Kate, she notices the differences between town and country life: the lack of traffic noise, the unimpeded view from her bedroom window, the sound of bird song and the daily rhythm of farming life. As time goes by she learns more about animal husbandry and how food is produced. As she discovers, the operation of Moor End Farm still relies largely on manual labour, horse-drawn ploughs and basic farm machinery. The changing seasons are marked by tasks in the farming calendar – sowing, threshing, harvesting – with Jane enthusiastically joining in some of these tasks.

She is also introduced to the fauna and flora of the countryside surrounding the farm by Robert, the son of the rector of the local church. Together, the friends explore the woods, fields and country lanes spotting birds, insects, butterflies and woodland animals as well as identifying the wildflowers that grow in the fields and hedgerows.  Jane recounts some of these finds in the touching ‘Moor End’ letters she writes to her parents.

The author clearly has a passion for the natural world and a desire to pass on that enthusiasm to his readers. There are some wonderfully lyrical descriptions of the countryside and nature. ‘Her uncle’s cornfields blazed with scarlet poppies and a handsome lime tree in the rectory garden sang with the music of myriads of bees seeking the honey of the little flowers.’

The healing power of nature and the outdoors is another theme. Jane arrives at Moor End a pale, sickly child but a spring and summer spent out in the open air, as well as Aunt Kate’s simple but hearty meals and an abundant supply of tea, restores her to health, so much so that her parents hardly recognise her when they pay a visit. One can perhaps sympathize with her mother’s over-protectiveness towards Jane having nursed her through a serious illness, however, I’m sure I’m not the only reader to give a little cheer as Jane takes part in a race at the Bank Holiday fair on the village green.

Jane's Country YearThe book has beautiful full colour illustrations by Bernard Bowerman reproduced from the original edition. I think they would make a wonderful calendar.

In her introduction, Hazel Sheeky Bird notes, ‘Like many authors of genre fiction, Saville has always occupied an uneasy position – beloved by his readers, but frequently criticised by those who were not his intended audience’.  Although written for younger readers, I believe Jane’s Country Year will appeal to anyone interested in rural life in the 1940s, the countryside or the natural world. It also ties in with present days concerns about the environment, sustainability and the preservation of the countryside. As Uncle William remarks at one point, ‘And so you see Janey how ’tis that everything that came from the soil goes back into it at last’. I thought it was utterly charming.

If my review has made you interested in learning more about the book and its author, you can obtain a free ticket for the online book launch on 17th January 2022 here.

My thanks to Kate at Handheld Press for my advance review copy.

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#BlogTour #BookReview Betrayal by David Gilman @HoZ_Books @DavidGilmanUK

Gilman_BETRAYAL_Blog tour banner (1)-2Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for Betrayal by David Gilman. My thanks to Sophie at Ransom PR for inviting me to take part in the tour and to Head of Zeus for my review copy. Do check out the review by my tour buddy for today, Jo at Murder, Jo Wrote.


BetrayalAbout the Book

Someone’s trying to start a war. And Raglan’s just walked into the kill zone.

It has been many years since Dan Raglan served in the French Foreign Legion, but the bonds forged in adversity are unbreakable and when one of his comrades calls for help, Raglan is duty-bound to answer. An ex-legionnaire, now an intelligence officer at the Pentagon, disappears. He leaves only this message: should he ever go missing, contact Raglan. But Raglan’s not the only one looking for the missing man.

From the backstreets of Marseilles, Raglan finds himself following a trail of death that will lead him to Florida, to the camaraderie of a Vietnam vet in Washington D.C., and into the heart of a bitter battle in the upper echelons of the US intelligence community.

Pursued by both the CIA and a rogue female FBI agent, Raglan’s search will place him in the cross hairs of an altogether more lethal organisation. Tracking his old comrade, he finds himself in the midst of deadly conspiracy, and on a journey to a fatal confrontation deep in the Honduran rainforest

Format: Hardcover (544 pages)       Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 6th January 2022 Genre: Thriller

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My Review

I absolutely loved The Englishman, the book that first introduced the world to ex-French Foreign Legion soldier and all-round action man, Dan Raglan, so you can imagine my excitement when I learned that a follow-up was on the way.

The description of Betrayal as a ‘high-octane international thriller’ is spot-on. The action comes thick and fast. If Raglan’s not engaged in deadly combat, he’s either preparing for it or recovering from it.  Raglan is seemingly indomitable; the ‘kill zone’ being a place he knows all too well.  As one character remarks to him, ‘Dead people appear on a regular basis when you’re around’. He’s also clever, tech-savvy, super-fit, has eyes in the back of his head and is adept at using any sort of weaponry you care to imagine. A man of many talents, he can pilot a plane, speak any number of languages, spot a security camera a mile off, find his way through a crocodile-infested mangrove swamp and even perform minor surgery on himself.  And who else do you know who stores bullet fragments in his tooth mug?

In the hands of the author, Raglan is not some sort of robotic killing machine. He’s also mortal and carries traumatic memories of things he’s seen – and done.  He’s a steadfast friend and demonstrates an unbreakable loyalty to the comrades who served alongside him in the French Foreign Legion. As he says, ‘the Legion was family’ and their motto ‘the mission is sacred’ is one he lives by. There are occasional glimpses of a softer side too even if he admits ‘I don’t have anybody tearing themselves apart over me’.

At this point I have a confession to make: I’ve developed rather a crush on Raglan. I know it’s unlikely, and I’m aware I might have formidable competition, but if there’s ever a vacancy for a Mrs. Raglan, count me in. (I hope my husband isn’t reading this.) Apart from anything else, I’d make sure he had a good supply of his favourite dark blue T-shirts and I’d even tend to a wound on his upper thigh. (I really hope my husband isn’t reading this.)

The pace of the book is intense and, despite being over 500 pages, the short chapters help the story move along like a whirlwind. A plot that involves people in positions of power engaging in activity that circumvents government oversight in order to achieve their own political ends, well that could never happen could it? Although, wait a minute… And don’t worry if you don’t know your DIA from your FBI or your CIA, all you really need to know is that there are bad guys out there – really, really bad guys – planning to do all sorts of unspeakable things and Raglan is out to stop them.

Those not completely obsessed by the thought of Raglan stripped to the waist or all sweaty after a punishing two mile run (I know, divorce papers arriving in the post any day) need not worry, your thirst for all-out action scenes will be fully quenched. The author serves up one bone-crunching, brutal and bloody scene after another making you wonder just how Raglan has survived so long. But has he met his match when he encounters a deadly opponent just as driven and ruthless as he is? I’m afraid you’re going to have to read the book to find out.

If you’ve survived reading this Raglan love-fest, I think it will be apparent that I absolutely loved Betrayal. To my mind, it’s everything you could wish for in an action thriller.  (By the way, check out the author’s website to see a photograph taken during a private tour of the Pentagon that formed part of his research for the book.)

In three words: Gripping, action-packed, pacy

Try something similarNo Way To Die by Tony Kent

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David GilmanAbout the Author

David Gilman has enjoyed many careers  – including firefighter, being in the Paras and as a photographer – before turning to writing full-time. He is an award-winning author, is published in several languages and was also the screenwriter for A Touch of Frost.

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