Friday, 3 August 2012

Friday Recommends...


Friday again, and it's time for my choice of book for Friday recommends...







This is an exciting book blog hop that book bloggers can take part in once a week to share with their followers, the books that they most recommend reading!

The rules for Friday Recommends are:

Follow Pen to Paper as host of the meme.
Pick a book that you've read, and have enjoyed enough to recommend to other readers. It can be a book you've read recently, or a book you read years ago - it's up to you - but make sure you tell us why you love the book (like a mini review). You make the post as long or as short as you like.
Visit the other blogs and enjoy!

My Friday Recommended read

 is



Peaches for Monsieur le Curé

 by

 Joanne Harris 



Peaches for Monsieur le Curé (Chocolat, #3)
Published 



My 5 ***** Review



This eagerly awaited third instalment by Joanne Harris is a continuation of the story she started in Chocolat and The Lollipop Shoes. Returning to Lansquenet with her daughters, Vianne Rocher finds her old adversary, Monsieur le Curé, Francis Reynaud, in need of support. The town of Lansquenet is as mysterious as ever, but the dynamics of the town have changed, and for some of its inhabitants, increasing hostilities threaten the very fabric of life. It is the incomers from North Africa, who have brought their own changes to the community, and as their call to prayer from the muezzin competes across the banks of river Tannes, the ringing of the church bells echoes and reiterates the changes which are taking place. As always there is intrigue, and salacious gossip, but underneath the veneer of respectability, there is the darkness of prejudice, intolerance and religious persecution, all cleverly woven within a narrative that grabs your attention from the very beginning.

It is very easy to lose yourself in this book. The writing is as good as we have come to expect from Joanne Harris, she writes with such consummate ease and brings the town of Lansquenet alive in such a way that very easily you find yourself walking the cobbled streets with Monsieur le Curé, and sipping a cafe crème at Josephine’s cafe. The food descriptions are as sumptuous as ever, the smell of peaches literally leaps of the page, so much so, you can actually taste the fruit, and watch as the dribble of peach juice trickles down Monsieur le Curé’s chin.

Returning to Lansquenet is like meeting up with a cherished friend, one that you haven't seen for awhile but in whose company you feel safe and secure and eager for news. I wanted the story to go on forever, such is the power of storytelling, and the ability to return to places you only see in your dreams is quite magical.

Thursday, 2 August 2012

A Very Special Package ...



Part of the joy of blogging means that I have so many books drop through my letterbox, all of the books are most welcome, but today I received something really special...

A beautiful signed copy of one of my favourite books of the year...The Book of Summers by Emylia Hall is a perfect summer read....










Thank you to Emylia and Headline Publishing Group - you have made my day ..x

Review ~ On the Island by Tracey Garvis Graves

My thanks to Real Readers for a review copy of this book.


On the Island

by

Tracey Garvis Graves



Published by Penguin July 2012






Anna Emerson is offered the job of tutoring sixteen year old TJ Callahan at his family’s summer home in the Maldives. Travelling together, Anna and TJ board a light aircraft to take them to the island, but when their pilot suffers a fatal heart attack enroute, they crash, and are set adrift in the Indian Ocean. Marooned on uninhabited island, Anna and TJ must learn to cope and adapt to life with no facilities.

Beautifully descriptive of life on the island, Anna and TJ’s relationship evolves and develops over time, and whilst the pace moves on fairly rapidly, there is no compromising of the narrative. The emotional bond between Anna and TJ is handled in such a sensitive and caring way, you can’t help but get emotionally involved with both characters.

On the Island grabbed my attention from the beginning, I had no idea where the story would go, but without giving anything away, I was continually surprised and enchanted. Tracey Garvis Graves has an undeniable gift for storytelling; her narrative is light and easy, she sets the scene perfectly and allows the reader the luxury of getting to really know the characters. There are times when you have to suspend belief, but that, for me, is the magic of storytelling.


Without doubt this is a perfect beach read, best read whilst relaxing on a lounger by a pool, somewhere hot.......



I loved it, so it's  a ....huge 5***** review from me ....











Wednesday, 1 August 2012

Wishlist Wednesday...


I am delighted to be part of wishlist Wednesday which is hosted by Dani at pen to paper

The idea is to post about one book each week that has been on your wishlist for some time, or maybe just added.

So what do you need to do to join in?

Follow Pen to Paper as host of the meme.

Pick a book from your wishlist that you are dying to get to put on your shelves.

Do a post telling your readers about the book and why it's on your wishlist.

Add your blog to the linky at the bottom of her post.

Put a link back to pen to paper (http://vogue-pentopaper.blogspot.com) somewhere in your post



My Wishlist Wednesday book

is


by




Piatkus 2 August 2012





The Painter’s Apprentice is the sequel to The Apothecary’s Daughter and is to be published in hardback on the 2nd August 2012.

Beth, a gifted botanical artist, declares she will never marry since she intends to dedicate herself to her art. But then her cousin Noah arrives from Virginia and sparks off a chain of events which change her life forever. She makes friends in high places and, against a back ground of rising political unrest, she plays a small but crucial part in the Glorious Revolution and so alters the course of history.


I read and enjoyed The Apothecary's Daughter in March this year and absolutely fell in love with the book's sumptuous cover. It looks like The Painter's Apprentice has an equally divine cover that screams out .....READ ME...








Tuesday, 31 July 2012

Tribute to Maeve Binchy

The author Maeve Binchy has sadly died, but her story telling legacy will live on in her many books. I think that she is the only author whose books have kept my interest over the past four decades.



The first book I read in 1982 was Light A Penny Candle


Light A Penny Candle


In 1990 Circle of Friends


Circle of Friends



In 2000 Scarlet Feather


Scarlet Feather

In 2008 Heart and Soul

Heart And Soul


Picking up a Maeve Binchy novel was like having a chat with your favourite aunty - she was wise and witty and full of warm common sense.

I shall miss her books.

Monday, 30 July 2012

Review ~ The Sister Brothers by Patrick deWitt

The Sisters Brothers





This book is so far out of my comfort zone that I wasn't sure whether I would be able to find anything in it to enjoy, but I am pleased to say that I absolutely loved the whole of the book from start to finish.
I read it quickly over the space of a couple of days, and soon became enthralled in the story of Eli and Charlie Sisters.

Hired by the mysterious Commadore, Charlie and Eli are charged with tracking down and killing the eccentrically named Hermann Kermit Warm, but in order to do so they must travel to the gold fields of Sacramento. The spirit of the wild west and the desolation of the gold fields was perfectly done - you could sense the greed and the squalor. The overwheming desperation as men fought to survive in a tough and often unforgiving wilderness.There is an abundance of dark and drear humour, and yet there are also flashes of brilliance, and some genuine laugh out loud funny moments.My only cringe moments came with the bouts of violence and animal cruelty, this sort of thing doesn't sit easy with me, but I can fully understand why is was there - it did fit in with the story and wasn't gratuitously violent -

Both Charlie and Eli, whilst never likeable characters, do get under your skin, and in the end , despite their arrogance and irascibility, I ended the book feeling a certain amount of sympathy for both of them.

It's also one of my favourite book covers ever !!!



The Sister Brothers get a  5 ***** review from me ... I think Jaffa is reserving judgement on this one !

Saturday, 28 July 2012

Simply Great Britain...


London 2012

From the pastoral idyll of Thomas Hardy's England, through to the dark Satanic mills of the Industrial Revolution, the whole of the Olympic opening ceremony captured the quirkiness and eccentricity of this green and pleasant land.Where else could you get Bean, Bond, Beckham, and the Queen all on the same venue.

Certainly, there was the power and the glory of the early days of the British Empire, but there was also humility in the way we honour our fallen heroes, and give credence to our history, to our love of literature, to music, and sheer unadulterated drama.


The theme of the Olympic games is to inspire a generation, and as the hopes and aspirations of a proud nation rose with the lighting of the Olympic cauldron, the 205 copper petals representing the competing nations glowed like a beacon of hope.



Made me proud to be British.





Photos - 2012 Olympics | London 2012