Book Review – Mrs Quinn’s Rise to Fame by Olivia Ford

About the Book

Jennifer Quinn has a secret. Her love of baking has just won her a spot as a contestant on a primetime TV show. It’s only the second time in fifty-nine years that she’s kept something from her beloved husband Bernard.

She’s about to be whisked into an unfamiliar world of cameras, timed challenges and celebrity judges. She could be in with a chance of being crowned the best baker in Britain.

But, as Mrs Quinn’s quiet ambitions turn into unexpected stardom, the other secret she’s been keeping is in danger of resurfacing. It was supposed to stay hidden forever.

Will Mrs Quinn rise to the challenge? Or, will her success become a recipe for disaster?

Format: Hardback (400 pages) Publisher: Michael Joseph
Publication date: 28th March 2024 Genre: Contemporary Fiction

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My Review

Mrs Quinn’s Rise to Fame is a charming story whose moral is it’s never too late to make the most of your talents or to try something new. Jenny Quinn’s talent for baking – both sweet and savoury treats – has been known to family and friends for years, and by her husband Bernard for decades, but now it’s getting a wider audience.

Fans of TV’s Great British Bake Off will enjoy the scenes depicting the filming of the TV show: the weekly themes, the rather stern judges, the presenters with their quips and jokes, the last minute upsets and the contestants’ perilous journeys to the judging table with their creations.

It could all be a bit sickly sweet if it wasn’t for the glimpses we get into events earlier in Jenny’s life, memories often linked in Jenny’s mind to particular baked goods. They’re definitely not all good memories and also evoke a time when social attitudes were very different to today. But recipes also have happier associations – with national events, special occasions and even people. The latter is epitomised by Jenny’s recipe book which contains recipes handed down from her grandmother and her father. (It made me think of my rather scruffy old M&S cookbook with its additional scribbled recipes and pages stuck together with various foodstuffs as evidence of its use.)

I particularly enjoyed the portrayal of the tender, loving relationship between Jenny and Bernard, her husband of almost sixty years. I loved Jenny’s description of their marriage as her proudest recipe, tweaked and modified over time. However, growing old together is bittersweet. On the one hand there’s the easy companionship, the shared experiences and memories, but on the other hand there’s the knowledge that, before long, one of you may be left alone. In keeping a secret from him for sixty years, I was sad that Jenny so underestimated Bernard’s generosity of spirit.

Although very different from the type of book I’d usually read, I found Mrs Quinn’s Rise to Fame as satisfying as a toasted teacake on a cold winter’s afternoon. I can see a spin-off recipe book in the making.

I received a proof copy courtesy of Michael Joseph.

In three words: Charming, tender, heart-warming
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About the Author

Olivia Ford has spent the last ten years in entertainment TV, most recently as a story producer. Olivia is a graduate of the Faber Academy where she wrote the beginnings of Mrs Quinn’s Rise to Fame, which was longlisted for the 2021 Women’s Prize Trust’s Discoveries Prize. Raised in Lincolnshire, Olivia now lives in London.

#BookReview #Ad No Life for a Lady by Hannah Dolby

No Life for a LadyAbout the Book

Violet Hamilton is a woman who knows her own mind. Which, in 1896, can make things a little complicated…

At 28, Violet’s father is beginning to worry she will never find a husband. But every suitor he presents, Violet finds a new and inventive means of rebuffing. Because Violet does not want to marry. She wants to work, and make her own way in the world.

But more than anything, she wants to find her mother Lily, who disappeared from Hastings Pier 10 years earlier. Finding the missing is no job for a lady, but when Violet hires a seaside detective to help, she sets off a chain of events that will put more than just her reputation at risk.

Can Violet solve the mystery of Lily Hamilton’s vanishing before it’s too late?

Format: eARC (328 pages)                 Publisher: Aria
Publication date: 2nd March 2023 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

Those looking for a light-hearted, cosy historical mystery will find they’ve come to the right place with No Life for a Lady. Violet is a sparky, likeable character who is determined to resist her father’s efforts to marry her off. There’s fun right from the beginning as Violet recalls the ways she’s managed to fend off potential suitors to date. This includes pushing one such unfortunate into a boating lake and inserting a hot teapot between herself and another.

It was unclear to me why Violet has waited ten years to make a serious attempt to investigate her mother’s disappearance but once she embarks upon it she has no intention of stopping. Except that her chosen detective turns out to be no ‘knight in shining armour’. (Violet, you should have trusted your instincts). Suddenly, Violet wonders if she’s really ready to find out her mother’s secrets and to have them become the talk of the ladies of Hastings, not to mention the men. She’d wanted discretion, wishing to keep the investigation from her father.

Although it makes for some slapstick humour, I wouldn’t have minded if the author had made Violet slightly less ditzy. She’s frequently tripping over things, bumping into lamp posts and even getting locked inside a price of furniture at one point.  She’s also rather naive although, to be fair, that does lead to some laugh out loud moments, such as Violet’s errand on behalf of a Mrs Monk, the same lady who corrects a few of Violet’s misapprehensions about ‘marital intimacy’.  And, for a prospective detective, Violet is a little quick to reach conclusions based on limited evidence, including about one particular person.  However, she’s up for pretty much anything – except house cleaning – leading one character to remark ‘You are the most infuriating female I’ve ever met’.

Set in 1896, there’s a nice depiction of a Victoran seaside town complete with bathing carriages, small boys dressed in sailor suits and ladies promenading in their finery, although I’m not sure the phrase ‘get his finger out’ would have been in common parlance then. If I’m wrong, I stand corrected.

Finding the solution to the mystery of her mother’s disappearance provides Violet with grounds for believing she has what it takes to become a detective. It also signals there is potentially more fun to come in the company of this particular Lady Detective.

I received a digital review copy courtesy of Aria Fiction via NetGalley.

In three words: Light-hearted, funny, entertaining

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Hannah DolbyAbout the Author

Hannah Dolby’s first job was in the circus and she has aimed to keep life as interesting since. She trained as a journalist in Hastings and has worked in PR for many years, promoting museums, galleries, palaces, gardens and even Dolly the sheep. She completed the Curtis Brown selective three-month novel writing course, and she won runner-up in the Comedy Women in Print Awards for this novel with the prize of a place on an MA in Comedy Writing at the University of Falmouth.  She currently lives in London. (Photo: Twitter profile)

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