Sunday, 11 September 2016

Sunday WW1 Remembered...







Lights Out 

by 

Philip Edward Thomas

1878 -1917




I have come to the borders of sleep, 

The unfathomable deep

Forest where all must lose

Their way, however straight, 

Or winding, soon or late;

They cannot choose. 



Many a road and track

That, since the dawn’s first crack,

Up to the forest brink, 

Deceived the travellers,

Suddenly now blurs,

And in they sink. 



Here love ends,

Despair, ambition ends;

All pleasure and all trouble,

Although most sweet or bitter, 

Here ends in sleep that is sweeter 

Than tasks most noble. 



There is not any book 

Or face of dearest look

That I would not turn from now 

To go into the unknown

I must enter, and leave, alone, 

I know not how. 



The tall forest towers; 

Its cloudy foliage lowers 

Ahead, shelf above shelf; 

Its silence I hear and obey 

That I may lose my way 

And myself.






Edward Thomas was a British essayist, novelist and poet and was born in London to Welsh parents.  He is considered to be a war poet although most of his poetry was written before the war when he was already an established writer. 




He enlisted into the Artists Rifles in 1915 and was killed during the Battle of Arras

 on the 9 April 1917.









Thursday, 8 September 2016

Event ~ Racy Reads and Book Giveaway..




Racy Reads at Waterstones Piccadilly


8 September 2016


Racy Reads with Rebecca Chance, Victoria Fox and Nigel May


 in conversation with Claire Frost



One of the UK's most glamorous bonkbuster authors, Victoria Fox will be joining fellow bonkbuster writers Rebecca Chance and Nigel May in a celebration of Racy Reads at Waterstones Piccadilly on Thursday 8th September.



The FREE Racy Reads event includes a free glass of wine and will take place from 7pm at Waterstones Piccadilly and will be followed by a book signing.




More information can be found by clicking  here  and  here




 Killer Diamonds: A Glamorous, Thrilling Blockbuster Packed with Sex, Scandal and Murder (Paperback) Lovers and Liars (Paperback)


Author Rebecca Chance is the author of nine glamorous thrillers, including Divas and Bad Girls, blockbusters which combine intrigue and romance with her signature outrageous and sizzling sex scenes. Her latest novel,Killer Diamonds, is about an A-list film star whose decision to auction her fabulous jewelry collection sparks a struggle between her and wild-living playboy grandson which turns dangerous and deadly. Follow her on Twitter @MsRebeccaChance

Author Victoria Fox sets her glamorous romances in the fast-paced and glitzy world of Hollywood, where everyone has a secret to hide and drama is always lurking around the corner. Her latest novel, The Santiago Sisters, is a heart aching story of family and desperation. Follow her on Twitter @VFoxWrites

Showbiz journalist and author of Spicy Crime and Glam Fiction novels, Nigel May is a hugely successful writer of five jet setting books filled with sun, sex, and scandal. Lovers and Liars, his latest novel, combines his trademark sense of decadence and flair with a dark murder and twisting plot. Follow him on Twitter @Nigel_May

Claire Frost is Assistant Editor at The Sun on Sunday's Fabulous magazine. As well as editing pages and generally being a bit bossy, she is also the magazine's books editor and so gets to read and review hundreds of brilliant books every year and fangirl at amazing authors. Follow her on Twitter @FabFrosty.




And if you can't attend the event which should be a great evening of book chat,
you can win a fabulous copy of The Santiago Sisters in this wonderful  UK giveaway 



Mira
2016



The Santiago Sisters is a stunning summer romance which asks the question: just how far would you go to get the life you've always wanted?

When Argentinian twin sisters Calida and Terisita Santiago are separated aged fifteen they think they will never see each other again. Wrenched from her poor but happy life on their family farm Terisita is adopted by world-famous British actress Simone Geddes, who plans to make her into a superstar actress and showers with all that money can buy. Terisita, who has spent her childhood reading Mills & Boon novels, is in her element and on the road to becoming one of the world's most loved movie stars.

Utterly betrayed by her sister, Calida vows that no matter how famous or successful her twin sister becomes, she will fight her way to the top and take on Terisita. Calida starts out with nothing except a camera given to her by her father and letting nothing stand in her way, not even falling in love, she fights her way to the top of the heavily competitive world of fashion photography.

But no-one can predict the explosive events which finally bring the Santiago sisters into the spotlight together.




About the Author..

Victoria Fox
Picked by Look magazine as one of their Shooting Stars when she published her first novel Hollywood Sinners and nominated by bestselling author Jane Costello, as one of the UKs most exciting new writing talents, the last five years have seen Victoria Fox's stratospheric rise as one of the UK's favourite authors of women's fiction. The Santiago Sisters is Victoria's sixth novel following Hollywood Sinners, Temptation Island, Wicked Ambition, Glittering Fortunes and Power Games.



Victoria grew up in Northamptonshire and went to boarding school in Bristol at 13, where she learned what you can get up to when your parents aren't around and avoided games lessons at all costs. Parts of The Santiago Sisters are based on her experience of attending Badminton School in Bristol. After a short career in commercial publishing in London Victoria now lives in Bristol with her husband who she is madly in love with.




Follow her on Twitter @VFoxWrites

To find her on her website click here 







My thanks to Isobel at Midas PR for my review copy of The Santiago Sisters and the generous giveaway opportunity to one lucky winner.



~Good Luck ~







Wednesday, 7 September 2016

Blog Tour ~ Jacques by Tanya Ravenswater


Jaffareadstoo is delighted to be part of the Jacques Blog Tour 







And here's the author Tanya Ravenswater to tell us all about the Books that have inspired her.









Books that have inspired me



As the daughter of a teacher of English who, so the story went in his home town, had swallowed a dictionary in his early years, it was no real surprise that I was born with an appetite for words. I was lucky to be pointed towards some good books and also encouraged to read anything I chose for pure enjoyment. Both my parents read regularly aloud to us - books such as The Wind in the Willows, The Chronicles of Narnia, Charlotte’s Web, The Hobbit. First memorable borrowings from the local library included those perfectly child-sized illustrated Beatrix Potter books, traditional fairy tales, Alice in Wonderland, A Bear Called Paddington, Heidi, Black Beauty. In those days before Enid Blyton’s stories were criticised for being politically incorrect, I was a Famous Five and a Secret Seven addict. Enid’s stories were full of details that then completely held my interest, portraying worlds of independent people around my age, enjoying being together outdoors, solving crimes and investigating mysteries. For simiIar reasons, I consumed the entire Malcolm Saville’s Lone Pine series. Comics and girls’ magazines were almost better than chocolate. While I guessed they might not have been such mind-enhancing reads, I was especially lured in by a cringeable but fascinating ‘problem page’!


From my teens on, in and out of school, I was inspired by classics including Watership Down, Tom Sawyer, Little Women, Jane Eyre, Pride and Prejudice, Great Expectations, Mill on the Floss and Orwell’s Nineteen-Eighty Four. I particularly loved the voices of Thomas Hardy and D.H. Lawrence, their rendering of characters, relationships and awareness of forces of Nature, especially in novels such as Sons and Lovers and Far From The Madding Crowd.


When I went on to study languages at university, I read a range of novels in French and Spanish and in translation. Among the most memorable were Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s Love in the Time of Cholera and Flaubert’s poignant Madame Bovary in its evocation of a woman driven and ultimately destroyed by her own romantic dreams. I was also very struck by existentialist works, Sartre’s La Nausée and Camus’ L’Étranger, engaged by the serious intellectual commitment of such writers to exploring the meaning of individual life, their fearlessness in confronting ‘darker’, less comfortable themes such as alienation, angst and personal responsibility. 


From my twenties onwards, my reading has been pretty eclectic and it’s a challenge to select what’s most inspired me. I think if you’re a writer most, if not all, of the books you’ve read are going to have some influence, even if it’s to remind you what makes you want to skim rather than get their every word. Increasingly I’ve looked for books with a substantial psychological element, moving, serious as well as darkly humorous voices. Stories with guts, unpretentiously told. And I have an abiding pleasure in well written romantic fiction.


Steinbeck is of course a story-telling genius. There’s confidence and fluency in his voice, as well as such humility and compassion. His novels have an incomparable sense of place, a masterful holding of the dark and light. Of Mice and Of Men is one of my favourites. 


Among other top novels on my personal list would have to be: The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne by Northern Irish Brian Moore, Chocolat by Joanne Harris, the Rebus series by Ian Rankin, Trick or Treat by Lesley Glaister, Ian McEwan’s On Chesil Beach, the work of Deborah Moggach and Tracey Chevalier. There’s a lot more titles inevitably coming into my head as I sign off here. But then, life’s short and I should let you get on with your own reading!





About the Book

Bonnier Zaffre
8 September 2016



This is the story of Jacques Lafitte, a young French boy who is orphaned and torn away from everything he knows. Forced to move to England to live with his guardian – the proud and distant Oliver Clark – Jacques find himself alone in a strange country, and a strange world. 

As years go by, Jacques becomes part of the Clark family and learns to love life again. 

But then his feelings for Rebecca – Oliver’s daughter – become stronger. 

And this development has the power to bring them together or tear the whole family apart… 

For fans of Boyhood, Jacques is a moving and unique coming-of-age story about one boy’s struggle to find his place in the world.




Tanya Ravenswater was born in County Down, Northern Ireland. She first graduated in modern languages from St Andrews University. She has worked as a nurse, in bereavement support and counselling education. With a love of words since childhood, inspired by Nature and fascinated by the diversity of inner worlds and relationships, Tanya writes fiction and poetry for adults and children. She has published a collection of short stories for women, and has also been short-listed and published in the Cheshire Prize anthologies. Her children’s poem, Badger, was the winner of the 2014-15 Cheshire Prize for Literature.
















Follow Tanya on Twitter @starlingbird



Huge thanks to Tanya for this fascinating guest post and to Carmen at Bonnier Zaffre for the kind invitation to be part of this lovely blog tour.



Blog Tour runs until the 9th September




Do take a look at the other stops on the tour for more exciting content.








~***~

















Tuesday, 6 September 2016

Review ~ The House on Sunset Lake by Tasmina Perry



Headline Review
August 2016



A bit of blurb..

Casa D'Or, the mysterious plantation house on Sunset Lake, has been in the Wyatt family for over fifty years. Jennifer Wyatt returns there from university full of hope, as summer by the lake stretches ahead of her. Yet by the time it is over her heart will be broken, her family in tatters, her dreams long gone.

Twenty years later, Casa D'Or stands neglected, a victim of tragic events. Jennifer has closed the door on her past. Then Jim, the man she met and fell in love with that magical summer, comes back into her life, with a plan to return Casa D'Or to its former glory. Their reunion will stir up old ghosts for both of them, and reveal the dark secrets the house still holds close.

My thoughts about the book..


Casa D'Or is one of those places that as soon as you read the description you want to visit and there is no doubt that in this novel, the author succeeds in bringing the story of Casa D'Or completely to life, so much so, that I was completely enchanted by the house on sunset lake and the role that it plays in this fascinating story of love, loss and family secrets.

Twenty years separates the mystery at the heart of the story and both time frames sit very comfortably alongside each other. I enjoyed the different time aspects and felt that neither one outshone the other. Of course, inevitably I had favourite characters, and the handsome Jim Johnson was certainly up there with the best of them. As with all good  novels there is also to be found light and shade and I enjoyed discovering more about the mystery of what happened at The House at Sunset Lake during the heady summer of 1995.

I always enjoy the way that this author wraps the story around you, almost like a comfort blanket, so that you are completely at ease with the way the story progresses. There is fine attention to detail, and of course, the distinct trademark of good writing which this author always brings to her stories.

Overall, this is a perfect holiday read.



Best Read with ...A summer barbecue and a cool glass of peach iced tea..




About the Author





TASMINA PERRY is a Sunday Times Top Ten bestselling author. She left a career in law to enter the world of women's magazine publishing, going on to become an award-winning writer and contributor to titles such as Elle, Glamour and Marie Claire. In 2004 she launched her own travel and fashion magazine, Jaunt, and was editing InStyle magazine when she left the industry to write books full time. Her novels have been published in seventeen countries. Tasmina lives with her husband and son in London, where she is at work on her next novel.

Connect with the author

Facebook
Twitter @tasminaperry





My thanks to Caitlin Raynor at Headline for my review copy of this book.



~***~

Monday, 5 September 2016

Review ~ Belle and Sébastien: The Child of the Mountains by Cécile Aubry



Alma Classics
2016


When I was given the opportunity to read and review Belle and Sébastien by Cécile Aubry I jumped at the chance, because as a child of the sixties, I remember when this was serialised on television and back then, even the grainy black and white images didn’t spoil my enjoyment. I absolutely adored the theme tune and remember signing it, in original French, at a school Speech Day in 1969.

The story is about Sébastien who was found as a new-born baby in the Alps and brought up by Guillaume and his grandchildren, Angélina and Jean. Born on the very same day is Belle a beautiful white Pyrenean Mountain Dog who is passed from owner to owner until eventually, like two star crossed lovers, Sébastien and Belle finally meet. What then follows is a beautiful story about value of friendship, the glory of adventure and of the overwhelming connection between a boy and his dog.

You can’t help but fall in love with Cécile Aubry’s writing, and this story, which was first published in 1965 is exactly as lovely as I remember. The writing is beautifully simplistic yet it conjures time and place so perfectly that you feel at one with the mountains and the landscape. It is also gloriously illustrated by Helen Stephens, with simple black and white line drawings, which perfectly evoke the overall spirit of the story. 

This edition, published by Alma Classics in 2016, is one of those books which shall sit forever on my book shelf, as a reminder of my glorious childhood.



Best Read with...A mug of milky Ovaltine and couple of Jammy Dodger Biscuits..




If you need a reminder of the TV theme music - here it is 





About the Author

Cécile Aubry (1928-2010) was a successful French actress who gave up her film career to devote herself to writing children's novels and screenplays. She is most famous for the Belle and Sébastien series, for which she wrote the books and their television adaptations.


About the Illustrator

Helen Stephens is a multi award-winning author-illustrator. She has collaborated with some of the best loved authors including Michael Morpurgo and Roger McGough.






My thanks to Alma Books for the opportunity to read this lovely story again.




~***~

Sunday, 4 September 2016

Sunday WW1 Remembered with guest author John R McKay







As part of my ongoing tribute during this centenary of WW1, I am delighted to feature the work of some excellent authors who have written about The Great War.




Today I am delighted to introduce historical fiction writer











Hello John and welcome to this WW1 Remembered feature. Jaffa and I are delighted that you are our guest on the blog today...


I would like to say a huge thank you to Jo for giving me the opportunity of telling you my experiences of writing my new novel, The Sun Will Always Shine and my interest in the First World War.







My interest in the Great War began as a child when I used to avidly follow the comic strip Charleys War in Battle comic which told the story of a young man who finds himself caught up in the wave of patriotic fervour at the outbreak of war in 1914 and takes him through many of the horrors of the trenches including the Somme, Passchendaele, Verdun and the Zeppelin raids over London. Charleys War gave me an early education into the horrors suffered by that generation and sparked an interest and fascination that lasts to this day.

In 1991, whilst serving in the RAF stationed in Belgium, I took part in a Remembrance Day parade at Ypres. At first, being volunteered for this by my sergeant, seemed a bit of a drag, having to get up early on cold Sunday mornings to attend practice sessions leading up to the event. However, this parade proved to be one of the most emotional experiences of my life. A mixed group of soldiers, sailors and airmen; we marched from the Cloth Hall to the Menin Gate, all the time being watched quietly by the people of the rebuilt town, until we stood beneath the huge arches that bear the names of 70,000 soldiers lost at Ypres who have no known graves. Once there, we faced a group of World War One veterans, all of them now looking very old, sitting in wheelchairs, rows of  medals across their chests and blankets over their legs to give them some warmth in the November chill. As the last post was played and the poppy leaves began to rain down over us, I could see that many of them were in tears, no doubt remembering their fallen friends and the horrors they had to live through so long ago. I risked a glance across the line (we were supposed to face front, expressionless) and could clearly see many of my comrades with tears in their eyes, trying desperately to swallow the lumps in their throats, and then realised that I was doing the same.

Not long after, I attended a guided tour of the Somme battlefield, visiting the towns and villages that have this year been in the news due to the Centenary commemorations and have visited them again more recently. Villages such as Serre, where the Accrington Pals were massacred on the first day of the battle, Beaumont Hamel, Fricourt, Mametz, Delville Wood, High Wood, the Butte de Warlencourt, Albert, Bapaume and many more. What struck me about the area was the amount of cemeteries and memorials dotted about the countryside, some containing the graves of thousands of soldiers and some containing only a handful; a small part of a farmers field maybe, where a few friends had met their untimely deaths. Each of these graves and monuments wonderfully cared for by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission who do a fantastic job and cannot be praised highly enough.

The preserved trenches at the Newfoundland Park near Beaumont Hamel, which is looked after by the Canadian government, and the Lochnagar Mine Crater, are well worth visiting, to get an appreciation of the sheer scale of the battle.



Accrington Pals Memorial
Serre

Lochnagar Mine Crater

Trenches at Beaumont Hamel


I wanted to learn more and have researched the war a lot over the years. The one book that stands out from all the others is the account of the Somme written by Lyn MacDonald. Her book, simply titled Somme, is extremely well researched and very well written, as are all her other books on the First World War.

I got the initial idea for my first novel, The Journal, when I visited the Carriere Wellington in Arras, France in 2007. This is an underground holding area where 24,000 soldiers were billeted prior to the battle around that area in April 1917, and used the location again in my new novel The Sun Will Always Shine. Anyone interested in a battlefield tour should really pay this place a visit and combine it with a trip to the preserved trenches at Vimy Ridge, whose monument dominates the skyline north of the town.


Carriere Wellington
Arras

Vimy Trenches

Vimy Ridge Memorial


However, I always wanted to do a novel based around the Somme and after the good reviews I received for my WW2 novel The Absolution Of Otto Finkel I embarked on something that I had wanted to do for years.

I did not want to write an account of what happened, as this has been well documented, and so came up with the story of two brothers, one of whom is involved in a serious, impulsive incident that affects both their lives in a major way. They see the trenches as an escape from the trouble they find themselves in but do not realise that they have merely jumped from the frying pan and into the fire until it is too late. It carries themes such as love, friendship, death, regret and sacrifice and I am very proud of the novel. I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I have loved researching it (over many years) and writing it.


*All photographs are by kind permission








Finally another thanks to Jo for inviting me to take part in her excellent blog.

For more details of all my work please take a look at my website www.johnrmckay.com

















John served for seven years in the Royal Air Force and after two rather dull jobs in the packaging industry he then moved on to Greater Manchester Fire Service until leaving in May of 2014.
He lives just outside Wigan in the North West of England.

Twitter @JohnMcKay68

To find John's book on Amazon UK click here 





Huge thanks to John for this fascinating guest post. It's been a real pleasure to have you as our guest today and thank you for sharing your interest in WW1 with us.














~***~









Thursday, 1 September 2016

Review ~ Sandlands by Rosy Thornton



30134079
Sandstone Press
July 2016


A bit of blurb..

This beautifully written short story collection is inspired by coastal England, by the landscape and its flora and fauna, as well as by its folklore and historical and cultural heritage. Several of the stories focus on a bird, animal, wildflower, or insect characteristic of the locality, from barn owl to butterfly. The book might be described as a collection of ghost stories; in fact, while one or two stories involve a more or less supernatural element, each of them deals in various ways with the tug of the past upon the present, and explores how past and present can intersect in unexpected ways.



My thoughts about the stories..



You know that feeling when you reach out and open a storybook, that indefinable something which tells you that this is going to be something special, well, that happened when I opened Sandlands. I think partly, it was due to the glory of its cover as I can never resist an owl, but mainly it was down to the content, which drew me in from the beginning.

When it comes to short story reading, I am a bit of a butterfly; I flit and fly from story to story, never in sequential order, choosing stories at random simply because I like the sound of the title. So true to form, I was first drawn, in this collection, to the short story, The Watcher of Souls, as it spoke to me of the heart shaped faces of barn owls, a bird forever shrouded in mystery and all too often the harbinger of doom. I wasn't disappointed, far from it,  in fact, I was enthralled by a story that had me on the edge of my seat. Neither was I disappointed with my next choice which was The Witch Bottle, a dark little tale about the power of witchcraft and the threat of superstition.  I was so engrossed in The Witch Bottle that, by the end, I really wanted to go back in time to the Suffolk of 1656 to meet with Daniell Parmenter.

There’s a lovely lyrical quality to each of the stories and the author captures time and place so beautifully that it really is difficult to single out one story above another as each are perfectly complete. And yet, what's so wonderful about Sandlands is that even though each tale is beautifully complete within itself, such is the power of storytelling, that any single one of them, and there are 16 in total, could easily become a gloriously, descriptive novel.


Sandlands is, in that age old tradition of storytelling, a tantalising glimpse of times past which irrevocably connect with the future. It is a collection of short stories which could be woven into the fabric of our being, stories which deserve to settle like the folktales and legends of old, and which I am sure, will delight and enthral readers.




 "You dig up secrets and they cannot be put back "




Best Read with.. A glass of strong Suffolk ale and freshly caught Dabs, charred over a driftwood fire..




About the Author..


Rosy Thornton is a Fellow and Tutor of Emmanuel College, Cambridge and a lecturer in Law at the University of Cambridge, with specialisms in housing law, charitable trusts and feminist legal studies. She has published five novels, including Ninepins (Sandstone Press, 2012) and this is her first short story collection. She divides her time between Cambridge and the Suffolk sandlings.

Rosy Thornton portrait


Discover more about Rosy on her website click here
Follow on Twitter @rosy_thornton
Find on Facebook

My thanks to Rosy for sharing this delightful collection of stories with me.