Three Little Truths by Eithne Shortall

Welcome to my stop on the #blogtour for Three Little Truths by Eithne Shortall! Shortall is a new author (to me) and I was excited to get stuck in with this intriguing sounding story.

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Synopsis

On the idyllic Pine Road, three women are looking for a fresh start…

Martha was a force of nature, but since moving to Dublin under mysterious circumstances, she can’t seem to find her footing.

Robin was the ‘it’ girl in school. Now she’s back at her parents’ with her four-year-old, vowing that her ex is out of the picture for good.

Edie has the perfect life, but she longs for a baby, the acceptance of her neighbours, and to find out why her dream husband is avoiding their dream future.

The friendships of these women will change their lives forever, revealing the secrets, rivalries and scandals that hide behind every door…

My Thoughts

I enjoyed Three Little Truths.  It was a lovely soap opera of a book with a cast of characters I felt I really got to know and connected with; with a modernised slant of the introduction of WhatsApp messages punctuating the narrative.

This book felt like a curtain twitcher’s dream; fabulous gossipy conversations between friends with some cosy mystery thrown in together with secrets whispering from the pages.  The characters really came to life and the addition of the WhatsApp messages made the connection feel more intimate, making the reader feel more involved.

This was an absorbing read and I found myself smiling at the tiny community where everyone knows everyone’s business and I enjoyed watching how events unfolded.

Three Little Truths was a delightful, easy read; perfect to read on a cold day, curled up by the fire with steaming cup of tea.

Three Little Truths is out now in paperback and you can buy it here

My thanks go to Anne Cater of Random Things Tours for my invitation to the #blogtour and also to Kate Straker of Corvus/Atlantic Books for my beautiful, proof copy in exchange for my honest review.  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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The Family by Louise Jensen

It’s my stop on the #blogtour for The Family by Louise Jenson today, and I am thrilled to be sharing an extract with you!

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Synopsis

ONCE YOU’RE IN, THEY’LL NEVER LET YOU LEAVE.

Laura is grieving after the sudden death of her husband. Struggling to cope emotionally and financially, Laura is grateful when a local community, Oak Leaf Organics, offer her and her 17-year-old daughter Tilly a home.

But as Laura and Tilly settle into life with their new ‘family’, sinister things begin to happen. When one of the community dies in suspicious circumstances Laura wants to leave but Tilly, enthralled by the charismatic leader, Alex, refuses to go.

Desperately searching for a way to save her daughter, Laura uncovers a horrifying secret but Alex and his family aren’t the only ones with something to hide. Just as Laura has been digging into their past, they’ve been digging into hers and she discovers the terrifying reason they invited her and Tilly in, and why they’ll never let them leave…

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Extract

Part One: The Cause

Chapter One
Before LAURA
Fears. We all have them. That creeping unease. An aversion to something. For me it’s spiders. It stemmed from a nature documentary years before about the black weaver, a matriphagous breed that switches on her babies’ cannibalistic instinct by encouraging her spiderlings to devour her. Unable to tear myself away, I had watched through splayed fingers as the mother circled her lair, tapping and vibrating the web, stimulating her young’s primal instinct until they attacked her in a frenzied swarm. Hundreds of scuttling legs. Sinking fangs. The sound of the adult being consumed after venom had dissolved her from the inside out had stayed with me. What possessed a mother to sacrifice herself like that? How could her children turn on her? Of course that was long before I was a parent.

The instant I saw Tilly, tiny hands fisted, eyes squinting in the unaccustomed light, I plunged headfirst into a love that was absolute. A fierce desire as her mother to shield her from the world however I could. And she needed shielding. I knew how damaging it could be out there.
I had been damaged.

That morning though I had no idea how I was going to shelter her from the contents of the letter. As I drove towards school, I tightened my grip on the steering wheel as if it might somehow stop the sense of everything spinning out of my control. It didn’t.

What was I going to do?

I slotted my rusting Volvo between two shiny 4x4s. Hordes of kids traipsed past the car, spines curved under the weight of the books they carried, dragging their feet towards the black wrought-iron gates. I rubbed my temples, trying to dispel the pounding behind my eyes.

‘Do I have to go back to school, Mum?’

I heard the sadness in her voice. I heard it in my own as I said, ‘It’s been six weeks, Tilly.’ As though that was long enough to make everything right.
It wasn’t.

She wasn’t coping well. Neither was I but, for her, I pretended we’d get through it. We’d be okay. Even if I didn’t know how. ‘We talked about this,’ I said, but not unkindly. ‘It was your idea to come back on a Friday. Ease yourself into it. It’s one day, Tilly.’

She tucked her unruly dark hair behind her ears as she looked
anxiously out of the window. Her face looked smaller, skin ashen, black bags nestled beneath bloodshot eyes. She’d refused the offer of counselling, spending so much of her time shut away in her room that now, being outside was overwhelming.

‘You’ve already so much to catch up on but if you really can’t face it I won’t make you. You can come and help me in the shop instead. It’s time to try to re-join the world.’ I spoke slowly, deliberately, although each word was rough, grazing my tongue. Our Family Liaison Officer had said it was best to forge a routine, a semblance of normality, but was it? Sometimes being a parent was torturous. Spinning in circles like a bird with a broken wing. But Tilly was studying for A Levels. It was such an important year. Besides, at school she’d be with Rhianon and, although I knew the cousins were no longer inseparable, I hoped that away from the family drama they could begin to heal.

God knows, we all needed to heal.

Fine.’

It was dizzying how quickly she pinballed between sadness and anger, but I knew it was all part of the hard ball of grief that ricocheted inside her.

She flung open the car door. A lengthy sigh escaping the mouth that no longer smiled.

‘Wait,’ I called, snatching her lunch from the backseat. ‘If it becomes too much you can always ring me.’ She snatched the Tupperware from my hands, her expression as hardened as the plastic.

‘Try to have a good—’ The slam of the car door sliced my sentence in two. ‘Day.’ A constriction in my throat prevented me calling her back. What could I have said to make things right? She stalked away without a backwards glance, swamped by her black winter coat, which snapped at her ankles as she walked. Weight had fallen off her. Again, I had found her half-eaten breakfast dumped in the bin. On top of the browning banana skin, a smattering of Rice Krispies ground to dust where she had crushed them with her spoon. She never could stand milk.

She stooped as she crossed the road without waiting for the green man, the weight of both her rucksack and the world on her shoulders. I contemplated calling her back but I knew she couldn’t hide away forever. If she rang me I could be back there within fifteen minutes, no time at all, but I knew sometimes even sixty seconds could feel like an eternity. The desire to protect her, in the way I hadn’t been protected at her age, to whisk her away for a fresh start, was fierce and stabbing, but after that morning’s post, it seemed more out of reach than ever.

Tilly merged with the throng of children crunching over the autumn orange leaves that carpeted the pavement. I was reminded of the times Gavan and I would tramp though the forest searching for gleaming conkers, a wellington-booted Tilly nestled between us, her small gloved hands in ours. The smell of moss and earth. It was still so clear to me, the joy of it.

One, two, three, lift! We’d swing her back and forth as she clung on like a baby monkey, her infectious giggles making Gavan and I laugh. Even when she grew too tall, too heavy, she’d raise her knees to her chest to prevent her feet dragging on the floor, as if she couldn’t quite accept how big she’d grown. I watched her as she stamped up the drab grey steps, finding it hard to equate the carefree, smiling child of seemingly five minutes ago with this solemn seventeen-year-old. She was a young woman now, lost to me, almost. The days of being able to make everything in her world right again with a mug of hot chocolate and a cuddle were long gone, and I longed to have them back.

The Special Constable with the patchy beard and straggly ponytail, who patrolled the secondary school at 8.45 and 3.15 every day with a ferocity that would put a lioness guarding cubs to shame, half-ran towards me. My rational self knew that he was going to tell me off for parking in the wrong place, but still, my hands were shaking as I released the handbrake. Each time I saw a police uniform it evoked such a physical response, sickness rising like a serpent. I zoomed off the yellow lines before he reached the car, and it wasn’t until he disappeared from sight in my rear-view mirror that my breathing began to slow.

I would always associate the police with bad news.

With endless, endless questions.

Sometimes it all blended into a swirling, solid mass. The
past. The present. Impossible to separate.

The fear has never really left me. Recurrently concealing
itself in the layer between skin and flesh, waiting patiently for another trigger. The chance to attack.

I can’t remember.

And sometimes, consciously, I couldn’t remember. The lie became my truth. The pressure in my head insufferable.

Then, shadowed by night, the bony fingers of the past would drag me back and I would kick and scream before I’d wake. Duvet crumpled on the floor. Pyjamas drenched in sweat. And alone.

Always alone.

The scar on my forehead throbbed a reminder of my helplessness.
Thoughts of the letter filled my mind once more as I drove towards work.

What was I going to do?

Well I don’t know about you but that piece of writing has certainly sent a shiver down my spine!  The Family is out now in paperback and ebook format and you can buy it here

My thanks go to Jessica Lee and HQ Stories for the invitation to the tour and my gorgeous finished copy.  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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Overdrawn by NJ Crosskey

Welcome to my stop on the #blogtour for Overdrawn by NJ Crosskey!  This is slightly later than anticipated because I have been prepping for a #giveaway on my bookstagram account (@mrscookesbooks) in conjunction with my post.  Head on over there after reading my review for a chance to win a finished copy of the book!

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Synopsis

Henry Morris is watching his wife slip away from him. In an ageist society, where euthanasia is encouraged as a patriotic act, dementia is no longer tolerated.

Kaitlyn, a young waitress, is desperate for the funds to keep her brother’s life support machine switched on.

When a chance encounter brings the two together, they embark on an unconventional business arrangement that will force them to confront their prejudices, as well as their deepest, darkest secrets.

Crosskey combines the social commentary of classic dystopian works such as 1984 or The Handmaid’s Tale with the contemporary style of unreliable narration found in recent hits Gone Girl or The Girl on the Train.

My Thoughts

I was so excited to be invited on the blogtour for Overdrawn as I LOVE dystopian fiction, and this little gem of a book did not disappoint!  Overdrawn is punchy and pacy, yet packed with heart and tender relationships;  I became emotionally invested from the very beginning.

On the face of it, the whole premise of Overdrawn seems completely bonkers; yet the terrifying fact is that it is totally believable and utterly plausible.  I yo-yo’d through a range of emotions as I turned the pages of Overdrawn; but the one that struck me most was the horror at the macabre “Moving-On” parties (arranged for when people thought that they had become too much of a burden to society).  The forced gaiety was almost too much to bear!

I was enraptured by Overdrawn; totally sucked in and consumed by the story of Henry and Kaitlyn, yet simultaneously stupefied and gobsmacked by Crosskey’s clever and captivating tale.

When I finished Overdrawn I could hear my heart hammering in my chest and reverberating in my ears: What. A. Ride.  This politically charged, dystopian drama was both thought-provoking and heart-breaking and left me with a bittersweet taste in my mouth.  I look forward to whatever stroke of genius Crosskey offers up next, but in the meantime I’ll be buying her first book; Poster Boy.

Overdrawn is out now in paperback and you can buy it here

My thanks go to Lucy Chamberlain of Legend Press for my invitation to the #blogtour and also for my eye-catching, proof copy in exchange for my honest review (together with a finished copy which will be the prize on my bookstagram giveaway running all of this week!).  If you enjoyed my post, please do check out my others, and also the other stops on this mammoth #blogtour (see below).

Until next time!

@mrscookesbooks

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Deadly Dance by Hilary Bonner

It’s my stop on the #blogtour for Deadly Dance by Hilary Bonner today, and I am thrilled to be sharing a blogpost written by the author herself, with you!

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Synopsis

This compelling novel of psychological suspense is the first in an intriguing new series featuring Bristol detective, DI David Vogel.

DI David Vogel is first on the scene when Melanie Cooke’s bruised and strangled body is discovered in Bristol’s red-light district. The evidence points to Melanie’s father being the killer, but Vogel’s on edge. The quick arrest is too easy, too straightforward.

When two new murders are reported, Vogel’s team broaden the search: new evidence suggests that there are three different, disturbed criminals. Any one of them could have killed Melanie, but which one did? Vogel’s team inch towards the answer, never suspecting that the killer is watching them too, waiting for his moment to strike.

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Written by Hilary Bonner

Ideas – and where they come from

I was given the idea for Deadly Dance by my chum Chris, over dinner in our favourite restaurant. As he spoke the hairs on the back of my neck began to stand up. I just knew this was a book I had to write, and I started later that night.

The story begins like many other crime novels. But, after being called to the scene of a diabolical murder, my new series detective, DI David Vogel, finds himself tracking an invisible man. In this book nothing is as it seems..

I reckon the concept of Deadly Dance is the most chilling, the most original, and certainly the most complex, I have ever attempted. I have chum Chris to thank for it entirely. And this is the only time I have ever been given an idea in this way by a third party.

More usually my books are inspired by real life events, sometimes just a news item I have encountered, and sometimes a first-hand experience.

Most disturbingly of all, in the 1980s I lived by the river in West London next door to a real life murderer. I didn’t know it at the time, but John Allen, then my friend as well as my neighbour, was in 2003 found guilty of the murder of his wife and two children 27 years previously. And his story became the inspiration behind my novel When The Dead Cry Out

No Reason to Die, probably the most controversial of my books, wasinspired by the notorious series of unexplained deaths at Deepcut Barracks and elsewhere within the British Army. The families of several of the dead soldiers kindly placed their trust in me and worked with me in order to produce a complex conspiracy theory which, while presented as fiction, some of them believed might have come uncannily close to the truth. The Times described me as ‘keeping on the public agenda the stories our masters would prefer buried.’ As a former Fleet Street journalist I was deeply flattered.

Death Comes First was inspired by a the tragic death of my nephew Adam Broadbent at the age of 43. In the book the central character receives a letter from her dead husband, written just a few days before he was lost at sea. This throws her entire life into disarray, and sets in motion a catastrophic sequence of events. My partner Amanda and I received a letter from Adam after his death, written just before he died and posted on to us by his wife. It was addressed ‘to my two dotty aunts.’ There were no catastrophic consequences, but neither of us will ever forget that letter and the impact it had on us.

One way and another, I never really find ideas a problem. They seem to present themselves. After all, they are all around us. Within our families, our friendships, our day to day encounters with strangers, and all over the media, in newspapers, on TV, and, of course, on line.

It’s making ideas work throughout the long winding course of a novel that is difficult – and it never gets any easier!

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What a fascinating insight into the mind of an author! Deadly Dance is out now in paperback and you can buy it here

My thanks go to Jamie Norman and Blackthorn Books for the invitation to the tour and my gorgeous finished copy.  Thank you also to Hilary for writing a piece for my blog!! 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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I Wanted You To Know by Laura Pearson

Welcome to my stop on the #blogtour for I Wanted You To Know by Laura Pearson! I have been very keen to read this book as I have devoured (and loved) both of Pearson’s previous offerings and I was not disappointed!

* I will leave a trigger warning here – this book is about a young mother who has been diagnosed with terminal breast cancer.  It may not be suitable for all readers. *

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Synopsis

Dear Edie, I wanted you to know so many things. I wanted to tell you them in person, as you grew. But it wasn’t to be.

Jess never imagined she’d be navigating single motherhood, let alone while facing breast cancer. A life that should be just beginning is interrupted by worried looks, heavy conversations, and the possibility of leaving her daughter to grow up without her.

Propelled by a ticking clock, Jess knows what she has to do: tell her daughter everything. How to love, how to lose, how to forgive, and, most importantly, how to live when you never know how long you have.

From best-selling author Laura Pearson comes her most devastating book yet. Honest, heart-wrenching, and emotionally raw, I Wanted You To Know is a true love letter to life: to all its heartache and beauty, to the people we have and lose, to the memories and moments that define us.

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My Thoughts

When I closed this book,  I can honestly say that words failed me entirely.  I had hot tears running down my face and all I wanted to do was run upstairs and cuddle my two sleeping babies; hold them tight and deeply inhale their scent.

This book tackles the cruelty of cancer and how cancer does not discriminate.  I love the idea of writing letters to those you most cherish and imparting love and crucial knowledge to them.  There was a powerful rawness to the narrative;  heightened by a cacophony of emotions: love, anger and sadness, all swirled together and shaped the lives of those affected by the disease.

I adore Pearson’s style of writing; it is brutally honest and painfully lucid yet effortlessly beautiful.  I read with a knot in my stomach and a tight twist in my heart,  and felt myself sinking deeper with every page; my chest tightening at the injustice of it all.

Make no mistake here; I Wanted You To Know is totally devastating and I’d be lying if I said it didn’t upset me; it is impossibly sad yet it is also quietly brilliant.  This is a remarkable story of piercing bravery and forceful solidarity; a love letter to family and friendship; a heartfelt, emotional, yet frank and honest account which one could be forgiven for thinking is non-fiction.

I Wanted You To Know is heart-achingly beautiful; a real triumph of a novel which despite its melancholy, will stay with me for a long time.

I Wanted You To Know is out now in paperback and you can buy it here

My thanks go to Peyton Stableford and Agora Books for my invitation to the #blogtour and also for my gorgeous proof 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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