My Week in Books – 28th February 2021

MyWeekinBooks

On What Cathy Read Next last week

Blog posts

Monday – I published my review of She Came To Stay by Eleni Kyriacou as part of the blog tour.

Tuesday This week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic was Books That Made Me Laugh Out Loud.  I had a chuckle about how long some of the books on my shelves have been waiting for me to read them.  I also shared my publication day review of historical crime mystery The Art of the Assassin by Kevin Sullivan.

WednesdayWWW Wednesday is the opportunity to share what I’ve just read, what I’m currently reading and what I plan to read next…as well as have a good nose around to see what books others have plucked from their shelves.  

Thursday – I shared my review of The Northern Reach by W. S. Winslow as part of the blog tour.

Friday – I published my review of Nick by Michael Farris Smith, a novel imagining the early life of Nick Carraway, the narrator of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby

As always, thanks to everyone who has liked, commented on or shared my blog posts on social media.


New arrivals

To the Fair Land by Lucienne Boyce (ebook, courtesy of the author and Rachel’s Random Resources)

In 1789 struggling writer Ben Dearlove rescues a woman from a furious Covent Garden mob. The woman is ill and in her delirium cries out the name “Miranda”. Weeks later an anonymous novel about the voyage of the Miranda to the fabled Great Southern Continent causes a sensation. Ben decides to find the author everyone is talking about. He is sure the woman can help him – but she has disappeared.

It is soon clear that Ben is involved in something more dangerous than the search for a reclusive writer. Who is the woman and what is she running from? Who is following Ben? And what is the Admiralty trying to hide? Before he can discover the shocking truth Ben has to get out of prison, catch a thief, and bring a murderer to justice.

Cecily by Annie Garthwaite (eARC, courtesy of Viking via NetGalley) 

Cecily Neville marries a traitor’s son when she is sixteen. It’s a risk, but one she is willing to take. For though Richard Duke of York’s name brings great danger, it also brings a claim to the throne. And as a woman who watched Joan of Arc burn without flinching, Cecily is not afraid.

Politics and children soon become her life’s work. Politics in order to survive. Children to marry off, and to teach to serve their King. But also, should the opportunity arise, to take his place…

Love and Fury: A Novel of Mary Wollstonecraft by Samantha Silva (eARC, courtesy of Allison & Busby via NetGalley) 

‘Now, daughter, I’m to tell you a story to coax you into the world…’

Justice. Equality. Life lived to its fullest. These were the tenets at the heart of Mary Wollstonecraft’s life; the mother of Mary Shelley and arguably the world’s first feminist.

August, 1797. When Mary Wollstonecraft’s labour begins on a fine summer’s day everything appears normal. However, after her baby girl, her second daughter, is delivered, both mother and child will fight for survival. In that time, Mary Wollstonecraft weaves the tale of her life to bind her frail daughter close and to give herself a reason to fight, even as her own strength wanes. She describes a life lived against the conventions and restrictions of her time. A life that urgently demanded equality for herself and all women. A life that tempered triumph with loss.

Conjuring the all-too-brief moment when the stories of influential mother and daughter overlapped, Love and Fury is a tribute to the power of a woman reclaiming her own narrative and passing that legacy on to her daughter.

The Consequences of Fear (Maisie Dobbs #16) by Jacqueline Winspear (eARC, courtesy of Allison & Busby via NetGalley) 

September 1941. While on a delivery, young Freddie Hackett, a message runner for a government office, witnesses an argument that ends in murder. Crouching in the doorway of a bombed-out house, Freddie waits until the coast is clear. But when he arrives at the delivery address, he’s shocked to come face to face with the killer.

Dismissed by the police when he attempts to report the crime, Freddie goes in search of a woman he once met when delivering a message: Maisie Dobbs. While Maisie believes the boy and wants to help, she must maintain extreme caution: she’s working secretly for the Special Operations Executive, assessing candidates for crucial work with the French resistance. Her two worlds collide when she spots the killer in a place she least expects. She soon realizes she’s been pulled into the orbit of a man who has his own reasons to kill—reasons that go back to the last war.

As Maisie becomes entangled in a power struggle between Britain’s intelligence efforts in France and the work of Free French agents operating across Europe, she must also contend with the lingering question of Freddie Hackett’s state of mind. What she uncovers could hold disastrous consequences for all involved.

Blood Runs Thicker by Sarah Hawkswood (eARC, courtesy of Allison & Busby via NetGalley)

August 1144. Osbern de Lench is known far and wide as a hard master, whose temper is perpetually frayed. After his daily ride to survey his land, his horse returns to the hall riderless, and the lifeless body of the lord is found soon after. Was it the work of thieves, or something closer to home?

With an heir who is cast in the same hot-tempered mould, sworn enemies for neighbours and something amiss in the relationship between Osbern and his wife, undersheriff Hugh Bradecote, the wily Serjeant Catchpoll and apprentice Walkelin have suspects aplenty.


On What Cathy Read Next this week

Currently reading

Planned posts

  • Blog Tour/Book Review: The Garden of Angels by David Hewson
  • Top Ten Tuesday 
  • Waiting on Wednesday
  • Blog Tour/Book Review: Masters of Rome (Rise of Emperors #2) by Gordon Doherty & Simon Turney
  • Book Review: Dangerous Women by Hope Adams
  • Book Review: Stella by Takis Würger
  • #6Degrees of Separation

#WWWWednesday – 24th February 2021

WWWWednesdays

Hosted by Taking on a World of Words, this meme is all about the three Ws:

  • What are you currently reading?
  • What did you recently finish reading?
  • What do you think you’ll read next?

Why not join in too?  Leave a comment with your link at Taking on a World of Words and then go blog hopping!


Currently reading

Masters of RomeMasters of Rome (Rise of Emperor’s #2) by Gordon Doherty & Simon Turney (eARC, courtesy of Aries via NetGalley)

Their rivalry will change the world forever.

As competition for the imperial throne intensifies, Constantine and Maxentius realise their childhood friendship cannot last. Each man struggles to control their respective quadrant of empire, battered by currents of politics, religion and personal tragedy, threatened by barbarian forces and enemies within.

With their positions becoming at once stronger and more troubled, the strained threads of their friendship begin to unravel. Unfortunate words and misunderstandings finally sever their ties, leaving them as bitter opponents in the greatest game of all, with the throne of Rome the prize.

It is a matter that can only be settled by outright war…
 

NickNick by Michael Farris Smith (ARC, courtesy of No Exit Press)

Before Nick Carraway moved to West Egg, and into Gatsby’s periphery, he was at the center of a very different story- one taking place along the trenches and deep within the tunnels of World War I.

Floundering in the wake of the destruction he witnessed firsthand, Nick delays his return home, hoping to escape the questions he cannot answer about the horrors of war. Instead, he embarks on a transcontinental redemptive journey that takes him from a whirlwind Paris romance- doomed from the very beginning – to the dizzying frenzy of New Orleans – rife with its own flavor of debauchery and violence.

An epic portrait of a truly singular era, and a sweeping, romantic story of self-discovery, this rich and imaginative novel breathes new life into a character that many know, but few have pondered deeply. Told with enough alcohol, heartbreak, and profound yearning to paralyze even the heartiest of Golden Age scribes, Nick reveals the man behind the narrator that has captivated readers for decades.


Recently finished

Links from the titles will take you to my reviews

Daughters of Night by Laura Shepherd-Robinson 

She Came To Stay by Eleni Kyriacou 

The Art of the Assassin by Kevin Sullivan 

The Garden of Angels by David Hewson 

The Palazzo Colombina is home to the Uccello family: three generations of men, trapped together in the dusty palace on Venice’s Grand Canal. Awkward fifteen-year-old Nico. His distant, business-focused father. And his beloved grandfather, Paolo. Paolo is dying. But before he passes, he has secrets he’s waited his whole life to share.

When a Jewish classmate is attacked by bullies, Nico just watches – earning him a week’s suspension and a typed, yellowing manuscript from his frail Nonno Paolo. A history lesson, his grandfather says. A secret he must keep from his father. A tale of blood and madness…

Nico is transported back to the Venice of 1943, an occupied city seething under its Nazi overlords, and to the defining moment of his grandfather’s life: when Paolo’s support for a murdered Jewish woman brings him into the sights of the city’s underground resistance. Hooked and unsettled, Nico can’t stop reading – but he soon wonders if he ever knew his beloved grandfather at all. (Review to follow for blog tour)

The Northern Reach by W.S. Winslow 

Frozen in grief after the loss of her son at sea, Edith Baines stares across the water at a schooner, under full sail yet motionless in the winter wind and surging tide of the Northern Reach. Edith seems to be hallucinating. Or is she? Edith’s boat-watch opens The Northern Reach, set in the coastal town of Wellbridge, Maine, where townspeople squeeze a living from the perilous bay or scrape by on the largesse of the summer folk and whatever they can cobble together, salvage, or grab.

At the center of town life is the Baines family, land-rich, cash-poor descendants of town founders, along with the ne’er-do-well Moody clan, the Martins of Skunk Pond, and the dirt farming, bootlegging Edgecombs. Over the course of the twentieth century, the families intersect, interact, and intermarry, grappling with secrets and prejudices that span generations, opening new wounds and reckoning with old ghosts. (Review to follow for blog tour)


What Cathy (will) Read Next

Dangerous WomenDangerous Women by Hope Adams (eARC, courtesy of Michael Joseph via NetGalley)

London, 1841. Two hundred Englishwomen file aboard the Rajah, the ship that will take them on a three-month voyage to the other side of the world. They’re daughters, sisters, mothers – and convicts. Transported for petty crimes. Except one of their number is a secret killer, fleeing justice. When a woman is mortally wounded, the hunt is on for the culprit. But who would attack one of their own, and why?

Based on a true story, Dangerous Women is a sweeping tale of confinement, loss, love and, above all, hope in the unlikeliest of places.