Blog Tour/Book Review: Birdie & Jude by Phyllis H. Moore

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I’m delighted to be co-hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for Birdie & Jude by Phyllis H. Moore.  Thanks to Rachel at Rachel’s Random Resources for inviting me to take part in the tour and to the author for my review copy.


Birdie & JudeAbout the Book

A moving novel of loss, regret, denial, and discovery on Galveston Island, from the author of Opal’s Story and The Ember Months.

Birdie has lived to regret many of her decisions, but she doesn’t regret offering a stranger, Jude, shelter from an approaching hurricane. Their serendipitous meeting will form a bond that will change their lives forever.

In a character driven story with memories of the protests and inequality plaguing the 1960’s, Birdie’s reached middle age and questions her life. Jude is striking out on her own, but has been derailed by a fatal accident claiming her only friend. Although their backgrounds and lives are vastly different, they recognize something in the other that forges a friendship.

As their relationship solidifies, they share glimpses of their pasts. Birdie is a product of the ’60’s, an aging hippie, with a series of resentments. She had a sheltered childhood in an upper class family. Her parents longed to see her make the Texas Dip at the Mardi Gras ball. Jude, however, entered foster care as an infant. Her parents, victims of a murder/suicide, left her and her siblings orphaned and separated.

There is something about their connection that strikes Birdie as familiar. Can souls know each other in different lives? Birdie struggles with the awareness that she has had regrets and hasn’t lived an authentic life, while Jude faces an uncomfortable truth about her own. It has all the feels.

Format: ebook, paperback (336 pp.)    Publisher:
Published: 20th March 2018          Genre: Contemporary Fiction

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

Find Birdie & Jude on Goodreads


My Review

The author certainly knows how to create believable characters both by giving readers access to their thoughts and feelings and through detailed scene setting. I found I could really picture Birdie in her colourful kitchen going through her morning routine or sitting on her porch. I liked the way the author explored the weaknesses, contradictions, foibles, and changes of mood that reside in all of us. For example, in the case of Birdie, the fact that she describes herself as a ‘spur-of-the-moment’ person yet clings in the main to a set routine, trying to persuade herself that it’s for the sake of Ollie, her dog. Or that she indulges in comments about a neighbour she’s known for years (that she herself admits are ‘shallow and mean, but so funny’ ) whilst on the other hand offering generous hospitality to Jude, a seemingly complete stranger.

The story is set in Galveston which I’d not known before reading this book is an island. The idea of a place that is set apart came to seem significant in a way, particularly from the point of view of Birdie’s instinct to be something of a loner. I also wondered if the storm that batters the community soon after Birdie and Jude meet was intended to be a metaphor for the emotional turmoil within both of them. The story unfolds through the alternating points of view of the two women, sometimes incorporating recollections of past events and people from their respective childhoods and young adult years.

It seemed to me I discovered a little more about Birdie – her thought processes, emotional baggage and internal conflicts – than I did about Jude, and that Birdie’s story had more interest, even though Jude’s story has a greater sense of mystery. However, that may be because, as an older woman, Birdie had more life experiences for the reader to learn about. Birdie’s convictions about the role of fate in our lives and the possibility of messages from beyond the grave are not ones I share. This element of the book wasn’t needed for me to believe in the genuine nature of the deep and mutually beneficial relationship that forms between Birdie and Jude.

At one point Jude muses, ‘Whatever shapes a person may never be known by anyone else.’ In Birdie & Jude, the author uses all her literary skill to give the reader just such an insight…as well as delivering a few surprises along the way.

I received a review copy courtesy of the author and Rachel’s Random Resources.

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In three words: Thoughtful, tender, heart-warming

Try something similar…The Hopes and Dreams of Lucy Baker by Jenni Keer (read my review here)


Birdie & Jude Author PhotoAbout the Author

Phyllis H. Moore wants to live life experiences more than once: doing it, writing about it, and reading about it. The atmosphere of the south draws her in and repels her. The characters are rich with dysfunction and redemption, real. She’s had two careers and two retirements. Both careers gave her inspiration for her novels.

Phyllis is a retired social worker and former owner/operator of a small bed and breakfast. She’s lived in the rural areas and cities of south Texas. She currently lives on Galveston Island with her husband, Richard.

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Blog Tour/Book Review: Tell Me Where You Are by Moira Forsyth

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Welcome to the final stop on the blog tour for Tell Me Where You Are by Moira Forsyth, recently reissued by Sandstone Press.  Thanks to Julia at Ruth Killick Publicity for inviting me to take part in the tour and for my review copy.


Tell Me Where You AreAbout the Book

Maybe the worst thing hadn’t happened yet. You couldn’t know the awful things lined up in the future, looming.

The last thing Frances wants is a phone call from Alec, the husband who left her for her sister thirteen years ago. But Susan has disappeared, abandoning Alec and her daughter Kate, a surly teenager with an explosive secret. Reluctantly, Frances is drawn into her sister’s turbulent life.

Format: Paperback (352 pp.)    Publisher: Sandstone Press
Published: 15th May 2019  Genre: Contemporary Fiction

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

Find Tell Me Where You Are on Goodreads


My Review

Missing wife, mother, sister, daughter….in Tell Me Where You Are, Susan hovers just out of sight of the reader, ever present in one sense but physically absent.  The reader’s view of her must therefore be formed through the differing perceptions of others.  Is she victim, villain or simply a troubled soul?

Don’t expect resolving the mystery of her disappearance to be the focus of the book.  Instead it’s more about the impact of her disappearance on others.  As time goes on, the gap she’s left in the lives of others seems to contract as other events take centre stage and it appears history or (depending on your view) mistakes of the past and their consequences, may be repeating themselves.   It certainly made this reader question whether things would be improved or made worse by Susan’s return.

The author creates some really believable female characters, in particular Susan’s sisters, Frances (from whose point of view the reader observes most events) and Gillian.  I also really liked the relationship that forms between Frances and her niece, Kate, who is Susan’s daughter by a previous relationship and step-daughter of Alec, Frances’s ex-husband.  Yes, in this family, things can get complicated.  The daily minutiae of family life is also well evoked: who’s picking up who from the station, friend’s house, school or university; shopping trips; preparations for guests and family gatherings.

Tell Me Where You Are is an acutely-observed exploration of the often complex dynamics of family relationships, sibling rivalry, motherhood, the disruption that can be caused by things left unresolved and why sometimes the best thing is to look forward, not back.

I received a review copy courtesy of publishers, Sandstone Press.

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In three words: Emotional, insightful, sensitive

Try something similar…The Last Day by Claire Dyer (read my review here)


Moira_Forsyth_2About the Author

Moira Forsyth grew up in Aberdeen, lived in England for nearly twenty years, and is now in the Highlands. She is the author of four previous novels and many short stories and poems published in anthologies and magazines. Waiting for Lindsay and David’s Sisters, originally published by Sceptre, are now available as e-books from Sandstone Press, which also published The Treacle Well in 2015.

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