Book Review: What A Way To Go by Bella Mackie

I was lucky enough to be granted an advance review copy of Bella Mackie’s first fiction book ‘How To Kill Your Family’ which I thoroughly enjoyed (and did not act upon!) Bella posted on social media over the festive period that her more recent book was on offer at 99p for a Kindle copy – well, I somehow missed the bargain, but was happy to invest in the full price! Here’s the blurb:

One wealth-obsessed man, who is also dead.
One status-obsessed woman, who is the perfect accessory.
Their four inheritance-obsessed children, each with a killer instinct.
And a murder-obsessed outsider looking to expose them all…

Anthony Wistern is wealthy beyond imagination. Fragrant wife, gaggle of photogenic children, French chateau, Cotswold manor, plethora of mistresses, penchant for cutting moral corners, tick tick tick tick tick tick. Unfortunately for him, he’s also dead. Suddenly poised to inherit his fortune, each member of the family falls under suspicion.”

Again, Bella has written about rich people based in London – I guess it worked very well last time – and again, there are lots of unlikeable characters!!

You know early on that Anthony has died, at his own 60th birthday party no less, but you don’t know how – and in fact, that’s the whole premise of the book. Anthony is stuck in a weird no-mans land between life and the after life – and in order to move on, he needs to remember how he died. Whilst trapped, he’s able to watch over his family and friends and see what they’re doing in real time to get clues and help trigger his memory. It’s an incredibly clever way to tell the story.

Each chapter is told from one of three points of view – Anthony, his wife Olivia, and an internet sleuth who is investigating Anthony’s ‘murder’. None of the narrators are particularly nice, and to be honest, neither are the supporting characters too!

Various ‘suspects’ are looked at – Anthony’s children, extended family, work colleagues, investors – and there are plenty of people with motivation for seeing him off. There are lots of twists and turns and you don’t uncover what’s actually happened until very near the end of the book.

It’s a real look at how awful some monied people, and people born with a family history if not cash, can be – but awful in a ‘can’t look away and need to see how this all finishes’ way.

Another great book – and as is already happening with ‘How To Kill Your Family’ – ripe for being made into a film or TV series.

Book Review: Wives Like Us by Plum Sykes

“No one knows better than Ian Palmer – Executive Butler – that social position is everything in the rose-strewn Cotswolds.
So when his boss, Tata Hawkins, flounces out of her (new-build) manor house after a row with husband Bryan, Ian is alarmed: for one thing, if Tata is on the social slide downwards, that means he is too; for another, he’s lost his home and has nowhere to store his prized collection of vintage Gucci loafers; even worse, a vacuum among the Country Princess set has opened up for a new Queen Bee.
With the old-money Pennybacker-Hoare sisters plotting to rid ‘their’ county of Tata and her ilk, a bikini influencer on the prowl for a husband just like Mr. Hawkins, a glamorous American divorcee threatening to steal Tata’s crown, and the heiress-next-door threatening to steal Ian, the Cotswolds are in chaos.
Can Ian restore Tata’s country crown and reinstate her to the comforts of the Manor?”

I’ve not read any of Plum Sykes’s previous books – but I liked the sound of this on Net Galley and was granted an advance review copy as Net Galley said it was to be published in June 2025 – however it would appear that it’s actually already out! (I suspect it might be a geographical issue and I’ve read a version destined for another territory??)

The book has real ‘Rivals’ vibes (one of THE TV shows of 2024, based upon the classic 1980s novel by Jilly Cooper) although this is set in current times in the Cotswolds rather than 40 years ago. Initially there are a lot of different characters and I found it a little bit confusing as to who was connected to whom – but after a while I got into the swing of it.

I really liked Ian from the start, he reminded me of Gary the bag man in the TV show VEEP, always one step ahead of knowing what his client needs. Tata was a bit of a drama queen – but not dislikeable.

I have kids who move in horsey circles, and some of the descriptions of that set were perfectly written – and similarly the private school sports activities! (Although my experiences are over the border in Worcestershire rather than Gloucestershire)

There was lots of name dropping and label dropping – and the storyline doesn’t have a huge amount of substance but this is a fun and fluffy, escapist read, and I thoroughly enjoyed it for all of those reasons. A huge thank you to the publisher and Net Galley for my review copy – be it advanced or not!

Book Review: So Thrilled For You by Holly Bourne

Having previously enjoyed books by Holly Bourne, I was delighted to be granted an advance review copy of her new novel, So Thrilled For You. Here’s the blurb:

“Nicki, Lauren, Charlotte and Steffi have been friends since university. Now in their thirties, life is pulling them in different directions – but when Charlotte organises the baby shower of hell for pregnant Nicki, the girls are reunited.
Under a sweltering hot summer day, tensions rise – and by the end of the evening, nothing will ever be the same. Someone started a fire at the house – and everyone’s a suspect…
Is it Steffi, happily child-free but feeling judged by her friends? Is it Charlotte, desperate to conceive and jealous of those who have? Is it Lauren, who is finding motherhood far, far worse than she imagined? Or is it Nicki herself, who never wanted a baby shower anyway?”

You know that a dreadful fire has happened – but not how it started or what the outcome is – and the story unfolds flicking between police interviews, flashbacks to the party, the back stories of the key characters and social media posts.

Each of the four main characters – friends since Uni – have a different relationship with motherhood. I have to say that each of these are written BRILLIANTLY and you can really understand their viewpoints. I might be a mother of four myself, but I completely respect women who are childfree by choice, and can understand that for some people the journey to motherhood is incredibly difficult – and I remember the early days of being a parent which is so very, very hard.

The ways each of the individual woman’s personal journeys intertwine is incredibly cleverly written – and there continue to be surprises throughout the book. I wanted to keep reading to find out what was going on – and the style of writing really keeps the momentum going. The description of the stiflingly hot weather – particularly in the glass box of Nicki’s parents’ grand designs house – is so well written.

Some of the characters are more likeable than others, and as you understand the history you realise why some of the foursome are closer than others, and why some now don’t actually like each other at all. The way everything ties up at the end is clever – and not completely predictable, which is always the sign of a good book.

Overall it was a great book which I thoroughly enjoyed reading. Thank you to the publisher and Net Galley for my ARC – the book is published on 16 January 2025 if you’d like to pre order it now.

Book Review: The Diamond Eye by Kate Quinn

I am not normally one for historic novels – I’m the same with historic TV series (apart from Downton!) however I’ve thoroughly enjoyed Kate Quinn‘s previous books, and so had requested a copy of The Diamond Eye from Net Galley. However, it had slipped down my TBR pile for months (over a year in fact) – but I recently remembered it was there and devoured it! Here’s the blurb:

“In the snowbound city of Kiev, aspiring historian Mila Pavlichenko’s life revolves around her young son – until Hitler’s invasion of Russia changes everything. Suddenly, she and her friends must take up arms to save their country from the Fuhrer’s destruction.
Handed a rifle, Mila discovers a gift – and months of blood, sweat and tears turn the young woman into a deadly sniper: the most lethal hunter of Nazis.
Yet success is bittersweet. Mila is torn from the battlefields of the eastern front and sent to America while the war still rages. There, she finds an unexpected ally in First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, and an unexpected promise of a different future.
But when an old enemy from Mila’s past joins forces with a terrifying new foe, she finds herself in the deadliest duel of her life.
The Diamond Eye is a haunting novel of heroism born of desperation, of a mother who became a soldier, of a woman who found her place in the world and changed the course of history forever.”

As with Kate Quinn’s previous (and subsequent!) books this is exquisitely written and incredibly informative as well as being a thoroughly enjoyable novel. Whilst it is ‘fiction’ it is based on a real person – and I think knowing that makes the storyline even more interesting (although obviously I’ve been Googling subsequently to see just how much artistic licence has been taken!)

You are rooting for Mila from the start – initially a young mother, estranged from her son’s father – but then throughout the war and her role as a sniper. Whilst she is fighting for Russia – she is technically Ukrainian – which obviously given current world events puts a different angle on it too.

Some of the storyline is bleak – but then it is during a war, and so that’s not a huge surprise. But there are elements of love and laughter too. And Mila’s love for her son shines through the storyline throughout.

Overall it was a wonderful book which I thoroughly enjoyed – I think Kate Quinn is always going to be an author I read everything she writes going forward.