Tales From My TBR Pile

bookshelf

Today I’m directing the spotlight on a particular section of my To Be Read Pile – review copies I’ve received from authors.

I’m currently closed to review requests but before I pulled up the drawbridge (so to speak) I’d already amassed quite a few books sent to me for review by authors. I’ll confess I’ve not made as much progress as I would have liked in reducing my author review pile and some of the books have been languishing there for quite some time.

Therefore, in highlighting a few of the books in my author review pile, I’m hoping to assuage my guilt at how long they’ve been there, reassure their lovely authors that I haven’t forgotten my promise to read and review them, and perhaps tempt other readers into adding them to their own TBR piles.


The Tide Between UsThe Tide Between Us by Olive Collins

1821: After the landlord of Lugdale Estate in Kerry is assassinated, young Art O’Neill’s innocent father is hanged and Art is deported to the cane fields of Jamaica as an indentured servant. On Mangrove Plantation he gradually acclimatises to the exotic country and unfamiliar customs of the African slaves, and achieves a kind of contentment. Then the new heirs to the plantation arrive. His new owner is Colonel Stratford-Rice from Lugdale Estate, the man who hanged his father. Art must overcome his hatred to survive the harsh life of a slave and live to see the eventual emancipation which liberates his coloured children. Eventually he is promised seven gold coins when he finishes his service, but he doubts his master will part with the coins.

One hundred years later in Ireland, a skeleton is discovered beneath a fallen tree on the grounds of Lugdale Estate. By its side is a gold coin minted in 1870. Yseult, the owner of the estate, watches as events unfold, fearful of the long-buried truths that may emerge about her family’s past and its links to the slave trade. As the body gives up its secrets, Yseult realises she too can no longer hide.

Magician and FoolMagician and Fool by Susan Wands

Pamela Colman Smith begins her career as an artist at the end of the Victorian Age at the Lyceum Theatre, where she grows from innocent empath to seer and channeller; creating her now world-famous deck of tarot cards.

Introduced to The Golden Dawn cult by Bram Stoker, the second in command at the Lyceum Theatre, she is commissioned to create a tarot deck for the members to use in their quest for magic. Golden Dawn’s most evil member, Aleister Crowley, becomes obsessed with unlocking the mysteries of the Tarot. His obsession peaks when he sees the power of her deck and realizes he can create a rival deck, leading him to manifest magical power to harm Pamela’s incarnates of her cards.

Cold, Cold HeartCold, Cold Heart (Katie Flanagan #2) by Christine Poulson

After the events of Deep Water, scientist Katie Flanagan has gained an undeserved reputation as a troublemaker. Her research career has foundered. When an accident creates an opening at an Antarctic station, she seizes the opportunity, flying in on the last plane before winter and the months of darkness close off all escape routes. Unfortunately for Katie, a revenge-seeking killer is at large at the station.

Meanwhile patent lawyer Daniel Marchmont has been asked by a venture capitalist to conduct background research into a company involved in Antarctic experiments. His investigations threaten to uncover scientific fraud and expose powerful individuals, some of them at the Antarctic station. Hitting too close to the truth, Daniel’s sleuthing puts Katie in fresh danger.

Then the power at the research station fails. Will the killer help save them all . . . or kill them one by one?

Book Review: The Secret Life of Alfred Nightingale by Rebecca Stonehill

The Secret Life of Alfred NightingaleAbout the Book

1967: Handsome but troubled, Jim is almost 18 and he lives and breathes girls, trad jazz, Eel Pie Island and his best friend, Charles. One night, he hears rumours of a community of young people living in caves in Matala, Crete. Determined to escape his odious, bully of a father and repressed mother, Jim hitch-hikes through Europe down to Matala.

At first, it’s the paradise he dreamt it would be. But as things start to go wrong and his very notion of self unravels, the last thing Jim expects is for this journey of hundreds of miles to set in motion a passage of healing which will lead him back to the person he hates most in the world: his father.

Format: eBook, paperback (299 pp.)           Publisher: Sunbird Press
Published: 11th November 2017                 Genre: Historical Fiction

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

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My Review

Structured in three parts, the first section of the book, set in 1967, is told from the point of view of seventeen-year old Jim. He is troubled by his frequent clashes with his taciturn, seemingly remote and disciplinarian father who disapproves of Jim’s trips to Eel Pie Island to listen to bands, dance and drink the night away. When Jim learns about a group of young people living in ancient caves in a place called Matala in southern Crete, he defies his father and, with his best friend, Charles, hitch-hikes across Europe to the island.

Initially, Jim is spellbound by Matala and the free and easy lifestyle of the community of young travellers he and Charles find living there, even if living conditions are basic to say the least. He becomes captivated by one girl in particular, the beautiful and free-spirited Chenoa, but in his naivety fails to grasp the ‘rules of the game’ are different here. After an act of what Jim regards as betrayal, he becomes disillusioned with what he had previously regarded as an utopia. Returning home he learns the cost of his time away is not just his father’s wrath but something much more troubling and significant.

The author conjures up a believable picture of life in the 1960s, whether that’s Jim’s home life (Vesta beef curry, foil-wrapped teacakes), the atmosphere of Eel Pie Island or the freewheeling, hippy lifestyle in Matala.

In my interview with Rebecca (see link below), she revealed one of the things she finds interesting is ‘what we share with one another and what we decide to keep to ourselves’ and described her fascination with words left unspoken. She also observed that secrets and mysteries can be the force that propels readers through a story.

In the case of The Secret Life of Alfred Nightingale a significant part of the mystery for the reader is to do with when or how they are going to meet Alfred and discover the nature of his secret life. Without giving too much away, I’ll just say that the author keeps the reader waiting for quite a while to find out (although some readers may have an inkling earlier on). Ironically, for a long time, Jim is not even aware that secrets exist for him to discover. It’s only conversations with other cave dwellers in Crete that make him start to wonder why he knows so little about his father’s past. What Jim eventually finds out (in, for me, the most powerful parts of the book) utterly changes how he feels about his father. Perhaps they are not so very different after all? Although maybe, unlike his father, Jim has a chance to put some things right.

The Secret Life of Alfred Nightingale is both an insightful coming-of-age story and a powerful exploration of the horror, heartbreak and lasting impact of war. It’s also about the kindness of strangers and the possibility of second chances.

Thanks to Rebecca for my copy of her book and for her patience in waiting for my review. You can read my earlier interview with Rebecca about the book and her approach to writing here.


Rebecca StonehillAbout the Author

Rebecca Stonehill is from London but currently lives in Nairobi with her husband and three young children where she set up Magic Pencil, an initiative to give children greater access to creative writing and poetry. She has had numerous short stories published over the years, for example in Vintage Script, What the Dickens magazine, Ariadne’s Thread and Prole Books but The Poet’s Wife (Bookouture) was her first full-length novel, set in Granada during the Spanish Civil war and Franco’s dictatorship. Her second novel, The Girl and the Sunbird, was published by Bookouture in June 2016.

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