The Island Child by Molly Aitken

Happy Friday and welcome to my stop on the blogtour for The Island Child ♥️

Synopsis

Twenty years ago, Oona left the island of Inis for the very first time. A wind-blasted rock of fishing boats and turf fires, where girls stayed in their homes until they became mothers themselves, the island was a gift for some, a prison for others. Oona was barely more than a girl, but promised herself she would leave the tall tales behind and never return.

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My Thoughts

First of all can we just take a moment to appreciate how stunning this cover is – huge props to the super-talented team at Canongate Art; it really is mesmerising.

The Island Child is a story about stories; and a mother’s relationship with her daughter and her coming to terms with her own identity.

In this sparkling debut, Aitken immerses the reader into the depths of Irish folklore with a rich tale told in a subtle and nuanced way.  The language used is beautiful and shimmers with goosebump-inducing clarity.

The Island Child made me feel as if I was in a dream; forever trying to grasp reality yet it never being quite within reach.  I felt like I was lost in the words and really enjoyed diving into this book at any given opportunity.

If you’re looking for a consuming escape from reality with a mystical, folky almost gothic edge, then this is the book for you.  After devouring this far to quickly, I’m really looking forward to reading Aitken’s next offering. ♥️

The Island Child is out now in beautiful hardcover and you can buy it here

My thanks go to Katie Huckstep and Canongate for my early proof of the book and the invitation to the blogtour.  If you liked my post, please do check out my others, and also the other stops on the blog tour (see below).

Until next time!

@mrscookesbooks

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All The Rage by Cara Hunter

Happy Tuesday and welcome to my stop on the #blogtour for #AllTheRage by Cara Hunter.

Synopsis

History doesn’t repeat itself. Does it?

A distressed teenage girl is found on the outskirts of Oxford. The story she tells is terrifying: grabbed off the street, a plastic bag forced over her head, then driven somewhere remote and subjected to an assault.

DI Adam Fawley is doing the best he can to investigate, but the teenager refuses to press charges. All he can do is try to ignore the sickening feeling he’s seen something like this before…

But when another girl goes missing, Fawley knows his time is running out.

Because if he ignores the past any longer, this girl may not be coming back.

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My Thoughts

To my mild embarrassment, I had not yet read a Cara Hunter so I was very keen to get my hands on an early copy of this when the opportunity arose.  I’ve heard so many great things about her work and was excited to finally get on board.

Happily, I was not disappointed – despite it’s hefty size, I tore through this book in a matter of hours; so gripped was I by the eventual, surprise outcome.

Hunter demonstrates a wonderful ability to give credence to her characters and make the reader care about them and their predicament – something I sometimes find lacking in thrillers and often thrown by the wayside in favour of pace.

I enjoyed the frustration element of the story and admittedly at times wanted to shake the main protagonist to speak up; spurring me on to tear through the pages faster.

I’ve just gone onto the website of a particular online store and placed all of Hunter’s backlist in my basket because for me, this book is everything a thriller should be; slick, smart and totally addictive.

All The Rage is out now and you can buy it here

My thanks go to Ellie Hudson and Viking Books for my early proof of the book and the invitation to the blogtour.  If you liked my post, please do check out my others, and also the other stops on the blog tour (see below).

Until next time!

@mrscookesbooks

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Dreamland by Nancy Bilyeau

Happy Sunday evening🌛 Welcome to my stop on the #blogtour for Dreamland by Nancy Bilyeau. 

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Synopsis

The year is 1911 when twenty-year-old heiress Peggy Batternberg is invited to spend the summer in America’s Playground.

The invitation to Coney Island is unwelcome. Despite hailing from one of America’s richest families, Peggy would much rather spend the summer working at the Moonrise Bookstore than keeping up appearances with New York City socialites and her snobbish, controlling family.

But soon it transpires that the hedonism of Coney Island affords Peggy the freedom she has been yearning for, and it’s not long before she finds herself in love with a troubled pier-side artist of humble means, whom the Batternberg patriarchs would surely disapprove of.

Disapprove they may, but hidden behind their pomposity lurks a web of deceit, betrayal and deadly secrets. And as bodies begin to mount up amidst the sweltering clamour of Coney Island, it seems the powerful Batternbergs can get away with anything…even murder.

Extravagant, intoxicating and thumping with suspense, bestselling Nancy Bilyeau’s magnificent Dreamland is a story of corruption, class and dangerous obsession.

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My Thoughts

Nancy Bilyeau is a new author (to me) and I’ve heard such great things about her books, so when the opportunity arose to review Dreamland, I jumped at it!  I wasn’t disappointed; this book has everything – it is stylish, accomplished and gritty all at once.

Bilyeau has a wonderfully descriptive style of writing which I immediately took to; I could feel the stickiness of the summer heat, smell the salty sea, hear the frivolity and taste the corn dogs of Coney Island.

The combination of historical fiction coupled with the crime and thriller genres made this the perfect read for me; I was totally lost in Dreamland.

Dreamland sucked me in to its hedonistic, scandalous, power hungry world and I felt truly immersed in and absorbed by Coney Island in 1911.  I didn’t want this book to end.

An exciting, dramatic and richly detailed story that positively sizzles with every sentence; Dreamland is one not to be missed this year!

Dreamland is out now in paper back and you can buy it here🍭

My thanks go to Hannah and Endeavour Media for my invitation to the #blogtour and also for my beautiful proof copy of the book.

Until next time!

@mrscookesbooks

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Paper Avalanche by Lisa Williamson

Good morning and welcome to my stop on the #blogtour for Paper Avalanche by Lisa Williamson: I am DELIGHTED to host a giveaway over on my instagram account for the gorgeous stack of books pictured below!  Check out those spredges 👀♥️

Find me on instagram: @mrscookesbooks

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Synopsis

When it comes to flying under the radar, Ro Snow is the expert. No friends. No boys. No parties. And strictly NO VISITORS.

It may be lonely but at least this way the truth remains where it should – hidden. Then Tanvi Shah, the girl who almost died, comes tumbling back into her life and Ro finds herself losing control of her carefully constructed lies.

Because if Ro’s walls come crumbling down, who’s going to take care of Bonnie… Bonnie. Never Mum or Mummy or Mother. Just Bonnie.

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Doesn’t it sound great? Head on over to my Instagram  account to find out how to win Paper Avalanches and re-releases of Williamson’s two previous books – all three books will go to ONE lucky winner ♥️

I’d love to be friends over on Insta as well as here ♥️

Paper Avalanche is out now in paperback and you can buy it here

My thanks go to Annabelle Wright of ED PR for my invitation to the #blogtour and David Fickling Books for my beautiful stack of books.  If you enjoyed my post, please do check out my others, and also the other stops on the #blogtour (see below).

Until next time!

@mrscookesbooks

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Critical Incidents by Lucie Whitehouse

Good morning and welcome to my stop on the #blogtour for Critical Incidents by Lucie Whitehouse.  I am very much looking forward to reading this book but for now I have an extract to entice you with…

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Synopsis

Detective Inspector Robin Osborne is going home.

Dismissed for misconduct from the Met’s Homicide Command after refusing to follow orders, unable to pay her bills (or hold down a relationship), she has no choice but to take her teenage daughter Lennie and move back in with her parents in the city she thought she’d escaped forever at 18.

In Birmingham, sharing a bunkbed with Lennie, and working as a benefit-fraud investigator, Robin is caught once again in the cat’s cradle of misunderstanding and resentment that is her relationship with her mother, and the delight of those wanting to see her cut down to size.

Only Corinna, her best friend of 20 years seems happy to have Robin back. But when Corinna’s family is engulfed by violence and her missing husband becomes a murder suspect, Robin can’t bear to stand idly by as the police investigate. Can she trust them to find the truth of what happened? And why does it bother her so much that the officer in charge is her ex-boyfriend – the love of her teenage life?

As Robin launches her own unofficial investigation and realises there may be a link to the disappearance of a young woman, she starts to wonder how well we can really know the people we love – and how far any of us will go to protect our own.

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Extract

Robin surveyed the table with its heap of crumpled napkins and burger boxes, stray fries and onion rings, the pile of bleeding ketchup packets. Aftermath of the cholesterol bomb. They’d had breakfast back in London, too, but as the road signs had started to portend BIRMINGHAM, her stomach started churning, and by the time they’d reached Warwick Services, it had felt completely empty or at least gnawing in some other way that made eating fifteen quid’s worth of Burger King seem like a good idea. Whoppers, milkshakes, the works – no section of the menu overlooked. Now she had stomach ache and she felt sick.

Across the table, Lennie’s stomach was a toddler-style pot under her Blondie T-shirt. She put her hands on it and grimaced. ‘Ugh. I feel like I’ve swallowed a sofa cushion. Full of grease.’

‘It was a two-seater. I got the fluff and loose change from down the back, too.’

Lennie laughed and for a moment, everything seemed brighter. There was still a chance this would all be irrelevant in the grand scheme, wasn’t there? A blip. Once, on one of the long nights when Lennie was a baby, she’d whispered in her ear that together, they could do anything. She would do anything for her, of course; but also, because of her, she, Robin, could do anything. Right, said a snide voice.

She stood quickly and began piling their rubbish onto the trays, crushing her burger box with a savagery that startled Lennie from her texting. ‘Once more unto the breach?’

A thump, hard but fleshy, as if a large bird – a pheasant, even a swan – had dropped from the sky and landed deadweight on the roof. They both jumped but a second later a smirking face loomed at the passenger-side window. For the love of god. Robin took a long breath then pressed the button to lower the glass.

‘Luke.’

Her own eyes looked back from a face that was her own, too, but pale and more defined, the jaw made square by pads of muscle. ‘Shocked you, did I? What are you doing sitting back here? There’s a parking spot outside.’

‘Someone must have just gone.’

Her brother made the yeah, right expression he’d been giving her since he was six. ‘How are you, Lennie? Can’t be many people who’ve staked out their own grandparents. Old habits dying hard, Rob?’

She flung the door open and moved to get out, remembering at the last second that she’d undone her jeans. ‘What are you doing here?’

‘Same as you – come to spend time with the rentals. Though just the afternoon in our case.’ He smirked again.

Robin came round to the pavement and stooped to look at the roof. She couldn’t see a dent, but still. ‘Why would you hit my car, you . . . fuckwit?’ she hissed.

‘Afraid it’ll affect the resale value? What?’ The injured innocence he did so well. ‘You’re going to have to sell it, aren’t you, if you’re as broke as Mum says? Can’t drive an Audi if you’re begging. Even if it was second-hand.’

‘We’re not begging.’ She glanced at Lennie, just getting out, then glared at him: Watch it.

‘Would you be back here if you weren’t?’

‘Hiya, Lennie. Robin.’ Natalie, Luke’s wife, lunged at them. She was like a newly hatched bird, Robin thought, all beak, eyes and pushy hunger, thrusting herself into the middle of every situation to ensure she wasn’t overlooked or slighted in some other unguessable way. Her fringe absorbed make-up from her forehead and hung in damp-looking, fresh-from-the-egg strands.

‘Right.’ Robin opened the boot. ‘Since you’re here, Luke, make yourself useful.’ She handed him a box. ‘It’s only light.’ She wasn’t going to give him an excuse to put his back out and malinger with his PlayStation for weeks. ‘Natalie, have you got a spare hand? It’s just a bag of—’

‘Sorry.’ She held up a set of lilac claws. ‘I’ve just had my nails done.’

On balance, Robin thought as she locked the car, Luke had done her a favour accosting her out here. Better to have the opening skirmish under her belt than walk into an ambush. And being pissed off was useful, armour of a sort. She’d thought she was over the worst but as she’d turned into Dunnington Road, she’d felt a moment of suffocating panic. Here it all was again, as if the sixteen years in between had just fallen away – collapsed: the pairs of Fifties semis facing off across the wide street, their bay windows netted prissily against anyone who could be bothered to peer over the rosebushes or the brace of mid-range saloons in the tiny front gardens. It was all so low-rise, so stunted: nothing reached higher than two storeys. The sky yawned overhead for bleak white acres, uninterrupted. She was seized by a sense of personal jeopardy, actual threat: if she was under it too long, exposed, it would suck out her soul.

As they rounded Terry Willett’s white Ford Transit – the bane of her mother’s existence, herself aside, for twenty-five years – she saw number 17 for the first time and waiting in the ground-floor bay, trapped like a bug between glass and net curtain, her dad. She watched him light up like he’d heard it was Christmas. In a whisk of nylon lace he was gone. ‘Chrissie,’ she imagined him bellowing, ‘they’re here!’

Seconds later, the outer porch door opened. Lennie ran to him, the bag bumping against her back. ‘Hello, sweetheart.’ He held her away to look at her. ‘You’ve grown again, haven’t you? Who said you could do that?’ He lowered his voice. ‘I’ve got some Creme Eggs in for you – we’ll have one after lunch.’

Lunch.

Lennie turned, eyes wide. Robin shook her head: Say nothing.

They could smell it now, the scent wafting through the open door: roast beef, roast potatoes, Yorkshire puddings, gravy, carrots, sprouts, peas and god knows what else. Shit. Why hadn’t her mother said something? No – why hadn’t she known? Of course she was going to cook the fatted calf. And that was why Luke and Natalie were here, wasn’t it? Luke wouldn’t drive five minutes to see her but he’d never miss a free lunch.

Over Natalie’s head, her dad winked. When the others had moved inside, he took her bags then pulled her into a hug, crushing her face into his sweater. His smell, it never changed: Ariel detergent, Camay soap and, faint but unmistakeable, the stealthy cigarettes that he disappeared off to smoke twice a day and still believed her mother knew nothing about. Her ribcage buckled as he gave her a final squeeze. ‘Good to have you back, love.’

Critical Incidents is out now in paperback and you can buy it here.

My thanks go to Martina Ticic of Midas PR for my invitation to the #blogtour and 4th Estate for my copy of the book.  If you enjoyed my post, please do check out my others, and also the other stops on the #blogtour (see below).

Until next time!

@mrscookesbooks

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