Blog Tour/Book Review: Once Upon A River by Diane Setterfield

I’m thrilled to be kicking off the blog tour for Once Upon A River by Diane Setterfield.  My grateful thanks to Doubleday and Henley Literary Festival for my (signed) proof copy of  Once Upon A River and to Anne at Random Things Tours for inviting me to participate in the blog tour and for giving me the honour of the first stop.  Do check out the tour banner at the bottom of this post so you can follow the other fabulous book bloggers taking part in the tour.

Once Upon A River is published tomorrow (4th December) in ebook format and in the US and Canada in hardback as well.  It will be published in hardback in the UK on 17th January 2019.


Once Upon A RiverAbout the Book

A dark midwinter’s night in an ancient inn on the Thames. The regulars are entertaining themselves by telling stories when the door bursts open on an injured stranger. In his arms is the drowned corpse of a little child.

Hours later the dead girl stirs, takes a breath and returns to life.

Is it a miracle? Is it magic? Or can it be explained by science?

An exquisitely crafted multi-layered mystery brimming with folklore, suspense and romance, as well as with the urgent scientific curiosity of the Darwinian age, Once Upon a River is as richly atmospheric as Setterfield’s bestseller The Thirteenth Tale.

Format: Hardcover, ebook (432 pp.)    Publisher: Doubleday
Published in UK: 4th December 2018 (ebook), 17th January 2019 (hardcover)
Genre: Historical Fiction, Mystery

Pre-order/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 Once Upon A River on Goodreads


My Review

The dramatic moment early in the book when an injured stranger arrives at the riverside Swan inn with what seems to be the lifeless body of a child sets in motion a search for answers to many questions.  It’s a quest for the truth involving the weighing up of competing claims about the child’s identity, the resolution of previously unresolved mysteries and the seeming contradiction between scientific fact and perceived events.  More than anything, it’s a yearning for a story that makes sense.  Having witnessed the dramatic arrival, the regulars at the Swan, a place known for its storytelling, immediately begin to talk, ‘finding words to turn the night’s events into a story’.

The concept of story-telling forms a key part of the book.  The telling of stories is shown to be variously a source of entertainment, a skill, a tradition handed down through the generations, a way of making a living or impressing others.  The book explores how stories may be rooted in a geographical area or a period of history.  What also emerges from the book is that stories can be a means of trying to make sense of things but that the ownership of stories can be transitory as they travel, mutate or are embellished in the retelling.  And, who doesn’t crave to know how a story ends?

The richly drawn characters in the book embody all aspects of human nature – the good and the bad – and cleverly address the nature versus nurture debate.  My favourite character was Rita.  Independent minded and self-educated in nursing and midwifery, she has a logical, questioning approach to things using astute observation to analyse people and situations.  She proves herself to be brave, resourceful and daunted only by very particular fears about one aspect of life.

The river, described at one point as ‘majestic, powerful, unknowable’, plays a central role in the book – almost becoming a character in its own right.  I particularly loved the chapter ‘Tributaries’ in which the author cleverly uses the river as a model for introducing other characters into the story.

The river is frequently a source of metaphor too.  For example, at one point a character finds himself hemmed in by a crowd of people – a ‘throng thickened to stagnation’ – until he eventually finds space and ‘a sluggish current’ that allows him to progress.  A group of drinkers at the Swan, trying to make sense of events find their thoughts have ‘eddied round, discovered currents within currents, met counter currents.’  Another character, facing a moral dilemma, finds himself ‘no more able to direct the current of his life than a piece of debris can control the stream that carries it.’

The river is not the only elemental force in the book.  The changing seasons, particularly the points of the year marked by the solstices and equinoxes, are the backdrop to pivotal moments in the book.  Although set in the age of scientific discovery – Darwin’s theory of evolution, the dawn of the study of psychology and the human mind – the characters in the book come across things that seemingly can’t be explained by logic, facts or reason.  Some choose to fall back on the supernatural and stories older than the one they are currently living through.   At times, characters experience presentiments about future events which, as well as tapping into the supernatural aspect of the book, also create narrative tension.

In the breathless final chapters, a positive torrent of secrets is unleashed, the true nature of things becomes evident and natural instincts are proved correct.  At the end, everything feels perfectly in balance with the rhythms of life from birth to death.  Like the ebb and flow of the tide, if you like.  (Sorry, these water metaphors are catching.)

I was lucky enough to hear Diane Setterfield talk about Once Upon A River at this year’s Henley Literary Festival, as it happens whilst sailing up the River Thames that is such an important part of the story.  (You can read my write-up of the event here.)  Hearing her talk about the book gave me additional insight into the themes it explores and resulted in a few ‘Ah, yes’ moments of recognition while I was reading it.

I think you can probably tell that I absolutely loved this book.  To borrow a watery metaphor from the author, I was swept away by the story and the skill with which it was told.   I closed Once Upon A River with a sigh of satisfaction, if I’m honest a little teary-eyed, and certain in the knowledge this will be one of my favourite books of the year.  Right now, it’s definitely challenging for the top spot.

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In three words: Magical, atmospheric, suspenseful

Try something similar…The Good People by Hannah Kent (read my review here)


Diane Setterfield Author PictureAbout the Author

Diane Setterfield’s bestselling novel, The Thirteenth Tale, was published in 38 countries, sold more than three million copies, and was made into a television drama scripted by Christopher Hampton, starring Olivia Colman and Vanessa Redgrave. Her second novel was Bellman & Black, and her new novel is Once Upon a River. Born in rural Berkshire, she now lives near Oxford, by the Thames.

Connect with Diane

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FINAL Once Upon A River BT Poster

 

Blog Tour/Book Review: None So Blind by Alis Hawkins

None So Blind Blog Tour Poster

I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for None So Blind by Alis HawkinsNone So Blind is the first in a new historical crime series, ‘The Teifi Valley Coroner’, set in the west Wales countryside of the 1800s. You can read my review below.

WinI’m pleased to say there’s also a giveaway (UK and Republic of Ireland only) with the opportunity for one lucky person to win their own paperback copy of None So Blind.  To enter the giveaway, click here.

Giveaway terms and conditions:

  1. Giveaway ends on 29th November 2018 at 12.00am GMT.
  2. Open to residents of the UK and Republic of Ireland only.
  3. The winner will be selected at random and notified using the email address they have provided. The winner will have 48 hours to respond with the postal address to which the prize should be sent. Prizes cannot be shipped to a PO box.
  4. If no response is received, a new winner will be selected.
  5. Please note What Cathy Read Next is not responsible for despatch of the prize but only for notifying the publisher of the winner’s details.
  6. The information you provide in the entry form made available to me by Rafflecopter will be used by me only for the purposes set out above. You can read Rafflecopter’s Privacy Policy here.

Many thanks to Emily at The Dome Press for inviting me to participate in the tour and for my review copy of None So Blind.  David Headley and the team at The Dome Press have a real knack for spotting great books and None So Blind is no exception.  Some of the other titles published by The Dome Press I’ve enjoyed recently are listed below (click on the title to read my review).

Smart Moves by Adrian Magson
Juliet & Romeo by David Hewson
The Last Day by Claire Dyer
Beautiful Star & Other Stories by Andrew Swanston


none-so-blindAbout the Book

West Wales, 1850. When an old tree root is dug up, the remains of a young woman are found. Harry Probert-Lloyd, a young barrister forced home from London by encroaching blindness, has been dreading this discovery.

He knows exactly whose bones they are.

Working with his clerk, John Davies, Harry is determined to expose the guilty, but the investigation turns up more questions than answers.  The search for the truth will prove costly.

Will Harry and John be the ones to pay the highest price?

Praise for None So Blind

‘Beautifully written, cunningly plotted, with one of the most interesting characters in crime literature.’ (E. S. Thomson,  author of Dark Asylum)

‘Individual and lively.’ (Barry Forshaw, writer and journalist)

‘The most interesting historical crime creation of the year.’ (Phil Rickman, author of The Wine of Angels)

Format: Paperback, ebook (457 pp.)    Publisher: The Dome Press
Published: 15th November 2018   Genre: Historical Fiction, Crime, Mystery

Purchase Links*
Publisher (30% off cover price) | 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 None So Blind on Goodreads


My Review

‘There’s none so blind as those who will not see.’

When the reader is first introduced to Harry Probert-Lloyd, they probably share his opinion that his sight loss (which at first he tries hard to conceal) is an insurmountable obstacle to his career as a barrister. ‘But if I could not read, or see a person’s face, or scrutinise an object, was I not blind?’  His condition has forced Harry to return home to his father’s estate and a future as a country squire in which he has little interest and which goes against his own egalitarian instincts. And if he can no longer pursue a career as a barrister, what hope does he have of successfully carrying out the investigation of a possible crime?

However, Harry has several things in his favour, such as his familiarity with the local people, his knowledge of the Welsh language and his heightened other senses.  As Harry confides to the reader, ‘Though I could not see their expressions, sometimes I was able to infer what people might be feeling from discernible movements or changes in posture’. And he retains his barrister’s skill in eliciting testimony from witnesses and instinct for weighing the truthfulness of their evidence.   He also has solicitor’s clerk, John Davies, to steer him in the right direction.  But does that only mean helping Harry avoid physical obstacles or notice things Harry can’t? Could John have other more personal  reasons in guiding Harry through the investigation?

Determined to get to the truth when all around him seem to want to keep the past firmly buried, Harry’s investigation brings him into conflict with both his father and risks making dangerous enemies – enemies who are not used to having their power and influence challenged.

In the fourth section of the book, in which Harry and John find themselves in unfamiliar territory, the revelations come thick and fast, proving that often people only see what they want or expect to see.  It just goes to show, we can all be blind to some things…  However, as his investigation progresses, Harry starts to ask himself whether there are some things better left in darkness and never brought into the light.   For others, it’s the exact opposite.

None So Blind is a cleverly constructed historical crime mystery that skilfully sustains the reader’s interest right to the end, partly thanks to the two narrator structure.  Throughout the book, I found myself constantly questioning what I was being told… and wondering what I wasn’t being told.  I’d liken it to a crossword puzzle where you think you’re making progress but then discover one wrong answer means you need to rethink all the clues you think you’ve solved so far.

The so-called ‘Rebecca Riots’ make an intriguing backdrop to the story and I found the author’s Historical Note at the end of the book absolutely fascinating, especially the contemporary parallels it brought to mind.  Oh, and readers wondering about the relevance of the series’ title ‘The Teifi Valley Coroner’ will find the answer at the end of the book.  They’ll also be dealt a few teasers by the author to be followed up, it is hoped, in future books in the series.  I’m definitely hooked.

I received an advance review copy courtesy of publishers, The Dome Press.

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In three words: Atmospheric, compelling, suspenseful

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Alis HawkinsAbout the Author

Alis Hawkins grew up in Cardiganshire, read English at Cambridge University and works with speech and language for the National Autistic Society.  Her first novel, Testament, was published by Macmillan.  She lives with her partner in the Forest of Dean near Monmouth. (Photo credit: Goodreads author page)

Connect with Alis

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