Tuesday, 7 October 2014

Review ~ Black's Creek by Sam Millar

22842469
Brandon Books
An imprint of O'Brien
2014
A powerful and atmospheric coming of age story....


A trio of young boys, skinny dipping in Jackson’s Lake in upstate New York, witness a tragic  event which has a devastating effect, not just on the boys, but also on the rest of the small community of Black’s Creek. As the novel gets underway, the tone is dark and brooding, and you soon begin to realise that there are dangerous secrets to be uncovered, and as the insidious feeling of menace creeps ever deeper, the threat of danger soon gets right under your skin and enters into your bones.

Beautifully atmospheric, the unfolding story is hauntingly realistic and the sparseness of the narrative only emphasises the stark reality of the story. The writing is imaginative and well conceived; the author captures perfectly the brooding nature of small town America, a place where resentment lingers and long held grudges are allowed to fester and grow.

I read the book quickly. It very soon becomes a compelling page turner and the need to know just how the story would eventually be played out kept me turning the pages long into the night. This is the first book of Sam Millar’s that I have read and whilst I'm not sure that this dark and brooding gothic noir is to my taste, I can’t deny that his legions of fans will love it.

And just to be absolutely sure ~ this is a stand-alone novel and not part of Millar’s best selling Kane Series.



My thanks to Real Readers and O’Brien for my review copy of this book.




Sam Millar

Monday, 6 October 2014

Pets Aplenty Blog Tour 2014 ~ Malcolm D. Welshman

Pets a Plenty Blog Tour 2014


Malcolm Welshman is a retired vet who has worked at London Zoo, in a small animal hospital and as a consultant dealing with exotics. He has written for newspapers such as The Sunday Times and The Daily Mail and national magazines including The Lady, Yours, Cat World and Dogs Today and was the My Weekly vet for fifteen years. He is a BBC Radio panellist and a guest speaker worldwide on cruise ships.


Austin Macauley
2014



A Little bit of Book Blurb...

In Malcolm Welshman’s third book in his vet series, Pets Aplenty, he draws on further experiences in his life as a vet seen through the eyes of his alter ego, Paul Mitchell. Set in Sussex-by-the-sea in the early 2000s, it’s a startling glimpse of the mayhem animals can inflict on a young vet’s life.....



Malcolm ~ welcome to Jaffareadstoo

Jaffa and I are interested to know more about your latest book




Where did the idea for Pets a Plenty come from?

The book is the third in a series, the first being Pets in a Pickle followed by Pets on Parade. Each is a six month period following on from one another and describe the experiences of a newly qualified vet in practice. They are loosely base on my own dealings with pets and their clients.



Can you give us three interesting things about your novel which will pique the reader’s interest?


There are some quite detailed descriptions of surgical procedures, in particular when the young vet attempts to save a dog that has a punctured lung; and operating on the spinal cord of a wallaby that has fractured its neck. Then there is the humour which to judge from the twenty or so Amazon five star reviews is one of the strengths of the book. But this is balanced by a degree of pathos and the uncertainty the young vet has in his abilities to cope with harrowing situations with which hopefully the reader will be able to sympathise.



Why do you choose to write in your particular genre?


Apart from the old adage ‘Write about what you know’ – being a vet, animal stories were always going to be an obvious option – I love creating funny scenes and playing with words especially puns. Actually this turned out to be the downside of my first book, Pets in a Pickle. There was too much word play, too many puns – me being too clever - and this came between the reader and the story line. Some people found my excessive use of puns really irritating. So I’ve toned this down in Pets Aplenty and though there are still some excruciating puns they have been limited to headlines written by the editor of the local paper and so are not so intrusive.



Is it easier to write about animals, or people?


Not much to choose between them. But perhaps creating characters is more interesting since if you’re lucky, they take on a persona as you write and you start visualising them in more detail. This certainly happened with Charlotte and Rupert Fitch-Williams, ex Chelsea types, I describe in Pets Aplenty. I had to decide what they would be wearing as ‘Sloaney’ characters. Once I’d dressed them, they came alive, speech, mannerisms, view points - all of which contributed to the heart wrenching story line and how the young vet came to own a Welsh Springer spaniel called Emily. 



What do you enjoy most about writing stories and do you write for yourself, or other people?


As mentioned above, I love humour and it’s when the Muse strikes and I find myself hurtling into a funny scene I’m truly in my element and love the creation of it. None more so than in Pets Aplenty where a python escapes through from the vet’s bathroom into Eleanor’s his neighbour, when she’s having a bath. I found myself conjuring up Venus rising from the sea only it was Eleanor, to quote: ‘out of the bath, staggering across the room, shell-shocked, buttocks wobbling, before you could say “Bottecelli”. Conjuring up that scene still makes me giggle. Since I hope readers will find it fun as well, it does mean I am writing for them in an attempt to achieve that aim.





Where would be your idyllic location for a writing retreat? 

I would never dare contemplate an exotic writing location as I’d soon lose the will to write, buried under a surfeit of rum punches and Thai massages on the beach. Give me my writing room any day and a mug of coffee half-way during the morning.




What’s next?


I'm extremely fortunate to have built up a readership that’s keen to see what happens next – particularly as there has been a faltering relationship between Paul, the young vet, and Lucy, the junior nurse, through all three books. The snowy scene at the end of Pets Aplenty when the two kiss while Emily dances round their feet giving woofs of sheer joy suggests there has to be a sequel. Several reviewers on Amazon have already been requesting one. So …



***


Jaffareadstoo is delighted to be part of this blog tour.
Thanks to the author for sharing his work with us and to Jennie and Joanna at Silverwood Books for their help in arranging this interview. 



***


My thoughts on Pets Aplenty


Stories about the escapades of vets and their assorted animals always have the ability to make me smile and Pets Aplenty is no exception. There is much in the story to keep you amused and occasionally to laugh out loud. The adventures of novice vet, Paul Mitchell, as he spends six entertaining months working at Prospect House veterinary hospital kept me turning the pages.

The author, a retired vet, is obviously writing about what he knows and loves and this certainly comes across in the knowledgeable way he describes the experiences and situations which occur at Prospect House. It’s not all about the animals though, and there are some nice interludes between the humans in the story, which helps to keep the balance of the story just about right.

Pets Aplenty is now the third book in the series of veterinary stories and will certainly appeal to those fans of the stories who may have followed the exploits of Paul Mitchell from the beginning, however, it's not essential to have read the books in order. So, if you like stories about animal exploits told in a light and easy manner then Pets Aplenty is a nice read to curl up with on a rainy afternoon.

I have to be very careful how I mention the word V.E.T around Jaffa as the very sight of his cat carrier launches him into orbital mode and despite whatever ails him, he suddenly finds he can move at the speed of light into his ‘safe’ place !



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Sunday, 5 October 2014

Sunday War Poet...

Philip Bainbrigge

1891 -1918



Sonnet


If I should die, be not concerned to know
   The manner of my ending, if I fell
Leading a forlorn charge against the foe,
   Strangled by gas, or shattered by a shell.
Nor seek to see me in this death-in-life
   Mid shirks and curse, oaths and blood and sweat,
Cold in the darkness, on the edge of strife,
   Bored and afraid, irresolute, and wet

But if you think of me, remember one
   Who loved good dinners, curious parody,
Swimming, and lying naked in the sun,
   Latin hexameters, and heraldry,
Athenian subtleties of dhz and poiz,
   Beethoven, Botticelli, beer, and boys.




Philip Bainbrigge was born in London, and educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge. Master at Shrewsbury School September 1913-March 1917. He was conscripted in August 1918.

This sonnet, influenced by the work of Rupert Brooke, was written whilst Bainbrigge was in the trenches.

He was killed in action at Ephèy, 18 September 1918


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Saturday, 4 October 2014

The Perfect Affair by Claire Dyer

20892774
Quercus
2014

How wrong is it to love someone you shouldn’t?


How right is it to stay after love has gone?


In the time it took to reach the end of the first page of The Perfect Affair, I knew that I was reading a story I always wanted to read. By the time I got to the end of the first chapter, I was completely enamoured by the story of Eve and Myles. And as the story progressed, I shared their dilemma; I rejoiced in their obvious delight in each other and empathised with their overwhelming fear that what they felt was somehow lessened because of circumstances. The parallel affair between Rose and Henry is interwoven into the story with consummate ease and is no less powerful for being told in a series of flashbacks. The transition between the time frames is flawless, the prose is lyrical, almost poetic in places, and the development of the characters with all their faults and foibles is achieved in a sympathetic and non-judgemental way.

It would be easy to say that writers of words make stories but they don’t, not really, as anyone can string words together, but words only become stories in the hands of a true storyteller. Only a magician of words can take and mould a story into something special and believable and only a talented writer can take a story, a set of characters and make the reader truly believe in what they are reading.

That lovely phrase about fairies springs to mind...if you believe in fairies, clap your hands...well, here’s a new one, if you believe in storytellers, read this book....









Claire Dyer


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Friday, 3 October 2014

Blog Tour ~ The Idea of Him by Holly Peterson


 

After a decade as an Emmy-Award winning Producer for ABC News Primetime, Holly Peterson worked as Tina Brown's right-hand woman at Talk. As a contributing editor to Newsweek magazine, Holly acts as an in-house Producer and Story Editor. Holly and her husband now live in NYC, happily, with their three children.



 I am delighted to be part of The Idea of Him Blog Tour




Harper Collins

Captivating and seductive, told in the whip-smart voice of a woman who is working hard to keep her parenting and career on track, The Idea of Him is a novel of conspiracy, intrigue, and intense passion – and discovering your greatest strength through your deepest fears.




My thoughts on the book....

Allie Crawford seemingly has the perfect life; a husband she adores, two wonderful children and a high profile job with a Manhattan PR company. Life should be good but it all comes to an abrupt halt when Allie discovers her husband in a scandalous situation which then turns her world completely upside down. Forced to re-evaluate her life, Allie has some tough decisions ahead, not just about her relationship with her husband but also about the direction of her life.

The book is an interesting look at the light and shade of contemporary relationships when the balance of power within that relationship is unequal. Allie is a mixture of contradictions, determined and feisty on one level and yet is also completely naive about what she wants from life. Much of the time I didn’t really warm to Allie’s character very much, but I could understand the dilemma she was faced with her and her determination to look after her children was commendable.

I found it to be a quick read, fast paced and intriguing with a hint of glamour.




My thanks to the author for sharing her work with me and Jaime Frost at Harper Collins for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.


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Thursday, 2 October 2014

Books Are My Bag 2014....

Are books your bag? 


totebag

The biggest-ever promotion of books and bookshops is back for round two. 
Books Are My Bag 2014 launches Thursday 9th October with Big Bookshop Parties on Saturday 11th October

follow on Twitter
#This Bookshop

My Favourite book shop

12 Gillibrand Street 
Chorley
Lancashire

Jo at Ebb & Flo Bookshop



Ebb and Flo is a glorious independent bookshop, which not only has the delicious scent of new books, but also the dazzling aroma of coffee and the enticing lure of cake. It is obvious that the proprietress, Diane, has a real passion for books and is doing all she can to encourage reader participation by organising author events and reading groups.

So, if your town is lucky enough to still have an indie bookshop - do pop in to browse, buy, and to say hello, and  instead of hearing the ping of an email from an on-line book seller, you hear instead the ping of a shop door as it opens into an Aladdin's cave of literary adventure.


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For more information visit




Wednesday, 1 October 2014

An author interview with ...R M Cartmel


R.M. Cartmel has been a writer one way or another since being a medical student at Oxford. He wrote his first (still unpublished) novel back in 1975 but it wasn't until he retired after a long career as a GP that he decided to dedicate himself full-time to the creation of crime fiction.

The Richebourg Affair


The Richebourg Affair, published on 30th July 2014, is the first of a trilogy set in and around Nuits-Saint Georges following the acute if rumpled Inspector Truchaud of the French police as he pursues fraudsters, murderers and gangsters over the course of a winemaking year in the vineyards of Burgundy.



Hello and welcome to Jaffareadstoo....


Where did you get the first flash of inspiration for The Richebourg Affair?

In the Café du Centre in Nuits-Saint-Georges. Well to absolutely accurate sitting on my own under a parasol outside dipping a late breakfast coffee, about ten years ago. ‘Inspector Truchaud’ walked, fairly fully formed into my imagination. Certainly he was wearing the trench coat at the time. The Richebourg plot came somewhat later, when I realised that if I was going to use my creation, he needed to actually do something. At the end of June 2012, when I retired from practicing medicine, I headed straight to Nuits-Saint-Georges to find out why he had been sitting in the Café du Centre. This involved talking to a lot of people to start with. Initially I was asking exactly where I might put an extra ‘imaginary’ village, not exactly asking for permission, but had they got an idea where that terroir might work. This question got a universally goggle eyed response, ‘Why do you want to build another village? Haven’t we got enough villages here for you already?’ But in among those conversations the idea of how one could tell a truly great wine valued at thousands of pounds a bottle, from a thunderously good one valued in the hundreds, and how often one might get the opportunity to compare the two. And from there the story started to emerge.


What can you tell us about the story, which will pique the reader’s interest?

What triggered me to write it was the fact that I was looking to read a novel set in Present Day Burgundy, a part of France that drags me back there so very often, and it’s not just the wine, the cuisine and the people, although they contribute, it is the ambience of the place, that screams ‘home’ at me when I arrive, even though I am rarely there for more than a few days at a time. I could not find the book I wanted to read be it in English or French, so it became obvious to me that was the book I was going to write. The second thing I knew that it had to be was technically correct, especially as it was now going to be geographically correct. I settled down with various wine makers and talked about the culture of grapes and wine, quite often over a cup of tea. (Really!) We-e-ell after a while, glasses appeared and that was followed by the evocative sound of a cork being pulled, and the soft tone of wine hitting the bottom of a glass, and then the sniff of a well aimed proboscis doing its business above the level of fluid in the glass.
In the book, as well as the detection, there is also a celebration of the pastoral life in this part of France, how and why is it liked that, and a certain amount of discussion of how it got that way.
   

Do you outline the plot first, or do you let the story go wherever it takes you?

I think it would be impossible to start without a basic concept of what the book is about, but, to misquote Sue Grafton from a mystery writers’ conference in Monterey CA this spring, ‘If you say your book is about murder and detection, I will hit you upside your head’. So I wrote down, maybe half a page to a page of concept to set Truchaud on his way, and settled down to see what happened. This did lead me to a variety of dead ends, which then required me to take control and steer the book back on track, until the boko and I agreed one what might be the finished article. Then we launched the editing team at it! There are some interesting characters who got lost on the journey, but they may yet reappear in the future, and they are still ‘on file’ so to speak.


Do you ever base your characters on people you know?

There are a couple of ‘real people’ in ‘Richebourg’, and they actually appear as themselves. David Clark, who helped an enormous amount with the viticulture side of the book, appears as himself. Also Madame Tournier who runs the Café du Centre in Nuits-Saint-Georges is the same Madame Tournier who actually runs the Café du Centre in the middle of Nuits-Saint-Georges. Otherwise no, the characters are real to the book, although they of course obey the laws of physics the same as the rest of us.


 What do you think makes a good fictional villain?

Surely a good fictional villain is someone you don’t’ see coming. If it was blindingly obvious who did it, then surely if you were writing a ‘whodunnit it would be a dull affair. If you’re writing some other fiction about crime, then the villain must fit the story. Ask me the same question in a couple of years’ time when I have written another two or three, and I may have a better answer!


When can we expect to see book two of the trilogy?

Sometime in February 2015. The first draft is completed and being pursued by the editing team as I write this. It will be tossed back and forwards between us being polished up into a glossy sheen, while I get on with the third book in the sequence, which I have already started writing, and will be spending most of September researching the ‘Vintage’ (It’s a hard life, doing this sort of research).




 Thank you so much for spending time with us and for sharing your thoughts on 

The Richebourg Affair.

Jaffa and I wish you continuing success.



My thanks to the author for sharing his work with us and Fiona at Love PR London for arranging this interview.


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