Book Review: Bad Men by Julie Mae Cohen

I saw the blurb for this in Red Magazine, and thought it sounded interesting (and with a similar vibe to Bella Mackie’s ‘How To Kill Your Family‘ which I very much enjoyed) – so I requested an ARC from NetGalley and was lucky enough to be granted it. Here’s the blurb:

It’s a tough job, but someone’s got to kill them . . .
Saffy has a secret. A secret that she is deeply ashamed of. It’s not the fact that she’s a serial killer in her free time. In fact, she’s quite proud of that. After all she’s only killing the bad men. She is making the world a better place.
No, her secret is far worse than that. Saffy has a messy, inexplicable, uncontrollable crush. So while she’s busy plotting her next murder, she also has the much harder task of figuring out how to get a boyfriend.
But if there’s one thing Saffy knows, it’s how to get her man . . “

The book is told from two perspectives – that of Saffy (or Seraphine Huntley-Oliver to give her her Sunday name!) with chapters told in the first person, and then from Jon – a true crime podcaster, with chapters told in the third person. I liked this change in ‘voice’ throughout the book (and thought it must have been quite hard to write like that?)

The initial chapter, when Saffy is still quite young, was quite disturbing – and I did wonder if the book was going to be that dark throughout. But it was actually setting the scene for why Saffy is how she is – a serial killer of bad men!

Whilst the rest of the book does contain more murders – they don’t seem as upsetting, and there’s a lot of dark humour throughout.

As well as the ‘love story’ between Saffy and Jon – there are various murders and other crimes – and the supporting cast of Saffy’s sister and her loser boyfriend, and Jon’s wife all add to the substance of the book.

There are lots of twists and turns and murders which make it very interesting – and I was always keen to see what happened next. I thought a couple of the twists were quite predictable – but most definitely not all! It was a really fun read – honestly, despite being about serial killers it really was!!

A big thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for my ARC. It was released in July 2023 – so you can but it already – and it would make a perfect summer read.

Book Review: The Beach Party by Nikki Smith

This was a recommended read in Red Magazine (a frequent source of book recommendations for me!) so I was delighted to be granted an advance review copy via NetGalley. Here’s the blurb:

“Six friends.
The holiday of their dreams.
One night that changed it all . . .
1989: The tunes are loud and the clothes are louder when a group of friends arrives in Mallorca for a post-graduation holiday of decadence and debauchery at a luxury villa.
A beach party marks the pinnacle of their fun, until it isn’t fun any longer. Because amidst the wild partying – sand flying from dancing feet and revellers leaping from yachts – an accident happens. Suddenly, the night of a lifetime becomes a living nightmare.
Now: The truth about that summer has been collectively buried. But someone knows what happened that night.
And they want the friends to pay for what they did.”

I have to say I struggled with the book initially. After the initial few current day pages, it felt like we were thrown into the 1989 holiday without having a clue who all of the ‘cast members’ were. Names were mentioned like you should know what the relationship between them all was – and no back stories given. The back stories did reveal themselves during the book – but I found it weirdly discombobulating at the start. (No other review I’ve read have said this – so maybe it’s just me? I was also reading it on my phone not my Kindle – as for some reason NetGalley wouldn’t permit this to be sent to Kindle – so maybe that was a contributing factor and it’s not the book’s fault at all?!? Plus I was reading The Fifth Guest by Jenny Knight on my Kindle at the same time, which had a similar cast of characters and premise.)

The group have graduated from Birmingham Uni (my hometown, so very much enjoyed some of the Brummie references!) and have headed off to Nina’s family’s swanky villa in Majorca. The description of the villa and Spanish countryside is excellent, and you can really imagine being there (those steep steps down to the water make me feel a bit squeamish even now as I don’t like heights!)

Nina is most definitely Queen Bee – with the others all part of her harem. Whilst I was only 15 in 1989 – the descriptions of the era are brilliant – and really evoke that time. There are clearly various issues between different members of the group of ‘friends’ – and these start to become evident during the holiday – peaking in the drama during and after the beach party (no spoilers here!)

I felt the pace really picked up then – in the aftermath of the incidents – and it was exciting to read what was going to happen next!

The group – or some of them (intrigue!) – are then reunited 30+ years later, to discuss the fall out from that fateful 1980s night.

The plot twists and turns loads, some of these I guessed, some I didn’t (I like that in a book – I want to be able to guess some storylines so I feel smug – but also be shocked by some of the outcomes so it’s not predictable!) but after my initial misgivings, I really did enjoy this book.

A big thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for my ARC in exchange for an honest review. The book came out a few weeks ago – and will make a perfect sunbed read (although maybe not if you’re in Majorca?!)

Book Review: The Fifth Guest by Jenny Knight

I’ve always enjoyed books by this author (who previously wrote women’s fiction as Jenny Oliver) in fact I was even a character name in one of them! So I was very excited to hear that she’d changed genres and was writing a thriller as Jenny Knight – here’s the blurb:

Five friends. One deadly secret.
Five old university friends gather on the eve of their flatmate’s memorial at a beautiful riverside house.
Host Caro is as perfect as always.
Shy, awkward Lily’s now a bestselling author.
Sports hero George loves suburban fatherhood.
Bad-boy Travis only gets his highs from meditation.
And gatecrasher Elle is still a troublemaker.
Estranged for years, they’re finally ready to reminisce over dry martinis and delicious food. But there’s more than that on the menu…
Because each guest is hiding a dark secret about their time at Oxford.
They’re all guilty of something. Is one of them guilty of murder?

The book is set in two timelines –

‘now’ which is the night before a memorial is unveiled to a friend / frenemy / lover of the cast of characters at the dinner – 3 of whom are there by invitation of the host, Caro, and 1 who is a gatecrasher.

‘then’ which is when the same cast were all at University in Oxford and Henry was still alive.

None of the characters are particularly likeable in either timeline, to be honest, but you begin to understand why as the stories unfold and twist and turn. They were flatmates at Uni – but by circumstances rather than choice – so that throws up lots of differences and foibles that wouldn’t necessarily have happened if they’d chosen whom to live with.

Whilst I didn’t go to Oxford – the University flashbacks are very reminiscent of my uni times – and the different types of students you get! Similarly I didn’t row – but friends of my children do, and so the cut throat / competitive nature of getting in ‘the boat’ was written really well.

I’ve seen the book described as a modern day Agatha Christie – and I can completely agree with that, with all of the players in one room as the explanation for the stories evolve. It also reminded me of recent books by Lucy Foley which have a similar vibe of middle class mates meeting up somewhere and historic secrets being revealed.

I would say it’s a mystery rather than thriller – I really enjoyed it, and was keen to see how both timelines unfolded.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for my ARC – and the book was released YESTERDAY – so I’m not tempting you into something months before you can actually buy it (and this is no way just an excuse for the fact it’s taken me a few weeks to get round to writing my blog post, nope, not at all!!)

Book Review: A Winter In New York by Josie Silver

Having loved books by Josie Silver before, I jumped at the chance to read her new book – even if it was a super hot summer’s day when I started it – and I was in Birmingham, UK – most definitely not New York! Here’s the blurb:

“A sumptuously cosy seasonal love story set in sparkling New York, from the queen of the ‘what if?’ romance Josie Silver.
Where better to start again than New York?
Iris arrives in the city of dreams, intent on restarting her culinary career, and leaving her recent heartache behind.
Wandering the streets at a famous food festival, Iris feels like she’s living in a movie. Then she stumbles upon a gelateria that looks strangely familiar. Inside, she meets Gio: a perfect leading man with an irresistible smile – and a crisis of his own.
As fate would have it, Iris is the one person with the answer to his problem. She just can’t tell him that . . .
So, can Iris finally let go of the past – and let herself fall in love?”

Yet again, Josie Silver has written a lovely book. This time the setting is New York – and as ever, it’s described incredibly evocatively, and you really feel like you’re there with Iris.

Some of the chapters are also flashbacks to Iris’s Mum when she was in a 1980s rock band – and I loved the change in time periods.

It has a real ’90s rom com’ feel to the book – but that’s also referenced in it – so it’s an incredibly self aware book!

I loved Iris from the start – but the supporting cast is also wonderful – from her boss / landlord / BFF Bobby and his husband Robin, through a stray cat, to Gio and all of the Belotti family – there is a huge breadth of characters, who are all written beautifully.

The thread through the story is a missing recipe for vanilla gelato that belongs to the Belotti family and is TOP SECRET – but through an historic twist of fate Iris has a copy of. Whilst the love story element of Iris and Gio is explored (and is quite sexy in places!) the mirroring of Gio’s love for his daughter – and Iris’s relationship with her late Mum is also really important.

There are lots of twists and turns – and I did wonder how we’d end up with a happy ending – and no spoilers from me!

It’s not out until October 2023, but definitely one to pre order. Many thanks for the publisher and Net Galley for my ARC.

Book Review: Lump by Nathan Whitlock

I saw this book on the header of NetGalley and it sounded intriguing (and I sadly know a few people who’ve had a dual pregnancy and cancer diagnosis) so I requested a copy. Here’s the blurb:

“A dark, satiric novel about a woman whose attempt to escape crises in her health and marriage ends up causing more chaos.
Cat’s career has stalled, her marriage has gone flat, and being a stay-at-home mom for two young kids has become a grind. When she finds out, all within a few days, that she is pregnant, that a lump in her breast is the worst thing it could be, and that her husband has done something unforgivably repulsive, she responds by running away from her marriage and her life ― a life that, on the outside, looks like middle-class success. Her actions send waves of chaos through the lives of multiple characters, including a struggling house cleaner, a rich and charismatic yoga guru, and even an ailing dog. What follows is a dark comedy about marriage, motherhood, privilege, and power.”

I have to say – this isn’t what I expected at all. The pregnancy, breast cancer and husband’s actions don’t come to light until about 40% through the book – I’d figured they’d be near the beginning and the book would be the aftermath – but there is a lot of scene setting. And even once it’s all revealed, the stories are still very much told as separate threads.

The chapters are told from different points of view – be that Cat herself, her husband Donovan, the cleaner and even an ill, old dog. The setting – in Canada – is also explained in quite some detail, which is not somewhere I’ve ever been (although is definitely on the ‘to visit’ list).

To be honest I really am not sure what I thought of it. It was ok? Ish? Different? Possibly my least favourite book of the year so far…….

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for my ARC. It’s out electronically in July 2023 if you fancy trying it even without a glowing review from me!

Book Review: None Of This Is True by Lisa Jewell

Having enjoyed books by Lisa Jewell before I was delighted to be offered an ARC of her new book out later this summer. Here’s the blurb:

Celebrating her 45th birthday at her local pub, podcaster Alix Summers crosses paths with an unassuming woman called Josie Fair. Josie is also celebrating her 45th birthday. They are, in fact birthday twins.
A few days later, Alix and Josie bump into each other again, this time outside Alix’s children’s school. Josie has been listening to Alix’s podcasts and thinks she might be an interesting subject for Alix’s series. She is, she tells Alix, on the cusp of great changes in her life.
Alix agrees to a trial interview. Josie’s life appears to be strange and complicated, and although Alix finds her unsettling, she can’t quite resist the temptation to keep digging.
Slowly Alix starts to realise that Josie has been hiding some very dark secrets, and before she knows it Josie has inveigled her way into Alix’s life – and into her home.
Soon she begins to wonder who is Josie Fair? And what has she done?

Ooh – this is a fabulous book – and as twisty and turny and exciting as you’d expect!

Whilst Alix and Josie might be ‘birthday twins’ there aren’t many similarities in their lives. Alix and her husband Nathan have primary school aged kids, live a seemingly ‘insta perfect’ life with lots of family and friends around, and whilst Nathan is a commercial property letting agent – Alix has a successful podcast. Josie, on the other hand, lives with her very much older husband and one of their grown up daughters – the other daughter having left home suddenly a few years before. Apart from her little dog, and a job as a seamstress, and a slightly odd obsession with denim, Josie doesn’t appear to have much going on in her life.

After initially bumping each other in the pub on their respective 45th birthday – Josie then ‘accidentally’ bumps into Alix again – and offers herself up as a potential interviewee for Alix’s podcast series.

The book is told from both Alix and Josie’s points of view, interspersed with recordings of the podcast and then also descriptions of a Netflix series made from the podcast series. You therefore know something ‘big’ is going to have happened.

The twists and turns keep you speculating as to what this could be – and I’m not sure you’d guess at all – and I’m not going to give any clues – you need to ride the journey for yourself!

I think social media – and particularly podcasts – have given everyone the opportunity to tell ‘ their truth’ – even if it’s not necessarily what everyone would consider THE truth. Recollections may vary and all that – and that is very much the vibe of Josie sharing ‘her’ story. But you also look at the back stories of the other characters and realise that you never really know what’s going on behind closed doors and in other people’s relationships.

A big thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for my ARC – and I’d highly recommend you all pre order it ready for release in July 2023.

Book Review: The Trial by Rob Rinder

When NetGalley offered me an ARC of Rob (Judge) Rinder’s debut novel, I jumped at the chance! Whilst I’d been aware of Judge Rinder on TV, I’d never watched an episode of his eponymous show (despite knowing someone who appeared in one #randomfact) – but really liked him on Strictly. I’ve also enjoyed his partnership with Susanna Reid as a guest presenter on Good Morning Britain (more of Susanna shortly!) and his eloquent campaigning on Twitter – so I had high expectations of the book.

For anyone not just tempted by the author – here’s the blurb:

“An unputdownable murder mystery by Britain’s best-loved criminal barrister Rob Rinder.
ONE MURDER. ONE IMPOSSIBLE CASE. WHO IS GUILTY?
When hero policeman Grant Cliveden dies from a poisoning in the Old Bailey, it threatens to shake the country to its core.
The evidence points to one man. Jimmy Knight has been convicted of multiple offences before and defending him will be no easy task. Not least because this is trainee barrister Adam Green’s first case.
But it will quickly become clear that Jimmy Knight is not the only person in Cliveden’s past with an axe to grind.
The only thing that’s certain is that this is a trial which will push Adam – and the justice system itself – to the limit . . .”

The book is told from Adam Green’s point of view – he’s a Jewish trainee barrister – so the author is sticking with what he knows. Adam is a pupil at a London chambers – and is in competition with another pupil to be taken on as a permanent barrister – so there is a lot at stake with each case over and above how the client gets on.

The setting reminded me a lot of the BBC TV drama ‘Silks’ – and this is not a bad thing, as I loved the programme and was gutted when it was cancelled a decade ago. (Admittedly my love was potentially heightened because Rupert Penry-Jones is on my laminated list!) I’m guessing as both the TV series and this book are written by people with experience of the legal profession, every chambers has an aggressive Head Clerk who basically rules the roost, competitive pupils (with a love / hate relationship), slightly lazy but well connected senior barristers – and lots of ‘marketing’ (excessive drinking and copping off out of hours!)

Having had mostly dull boring straightforward cases – suddenly Adam finds himself in the midst of a murder trial and a financial fraud trial. Both of these are working for his pupil master Jonathan who is not a nice man! He might be a KC (I’m guessing there was a quick ‘find and replace’ QC with KC during the drafting process!) but he is lazy, rude, misogynistic, having multiple affairs and just a total slimeball. He also doesn’t seem bothered with elements of the case against their client, Jimmy Knight, who has been charged with the murder of a high flying policeman – Grant Cliveden.

Adam then does some digging of his own accord – and in his own limited time – into PC Cliveden and Jimmy Knight. The book therefore has a dual pronged story of the legal case itself – and Adam trying to prove what really happened. At the same time the chapters are interspersed with phonecalls between Adam and his mother. She’s busy letting herself into his flat to clean and provide homecooked food – and ‘suggest’ nice Jewish girls for him to marry! I really enjoyed this insight into Adam’s family, and the history between him and his parents is revealed as the book progresses.

It’s very clever and intricate (and I didn’t spot any inconsistencies, and I’m super anal about such stuff!) and has lots of references to current life – I particularly liked the reference to Susannah Reid being attractive, when I know she’s Rob’s Ibiza holidaying and celebrity Gogglebox partner!!

Overall it’s a great combination of legal drama / murder mystery / domestic story – all wrapped up together – and you were rooting for Adam throughout. A fantastic debut novel, and I’d really like to revisit Adam Green in books to come!

A huge thank you to NetGalley, the publisher and Judge Rob Rinder himself for this excellent book. It’s out in June 2023 and I would highly suggest you pre order it now.

Book Review: Yellowface by Rebecca F Kuang

I had seen ‘Yellowface’ being raved about – so was delighted to be given an ARC on NetGalley. Here’s the blurb:

Athena Liu is a literary darling and June Hayward is literally nobody.
White lies
When Athena dies in a freak accident, June steals her unpublished manuscript and publishes it as her own under the ambiguous name Juniper Song.
Dark humour
But as evidence threatens June’s stolen success, she will discover exactly how far she will go to keep what she thinks she deserves.
Deadly consequences…
What happens next is entirely everyone else’s fault.”

The book is told from June Hayward’s point of view – who rebrands herself under the pen name Juniper Song to be more ethnically ambiguous – and she is clearly an unreliable narrator, and not very likeable. In fact, I’m not sure any of the characters are pleasant at all.

June’s college ‘frenemy’ and far more successful writer, Athena, dies right in front of June – who then steals Athena’s most recent work that Athena says no one has yet seen. June / Juniper passes it off as her own and it’s published to great success. However then things start to unravel for June.

It’s a seemingly intense commentary on the publishing industry, social media, racism and unconscious bias, cancel culture and lots more.

This has loads of 5 star reviews on NetGalley – so clearly people are loving it – but it just didn’t hit the mark for me, but I suspect that’s more my problem than anyone else’s! I’m sure it will hit all of the best sellers lists when it’s released later this week.

Book Review: Call Time by Steve Jones

I was intrigued by the premise of Sliding Doors meets High Fidelity – and also keen to read something by Steve Jones who has been on my radar since the 90s. It was between downloading the book from NetGalley and reading it that I found out Steve Jones used to go out with The One Show presenter Alex Jones (not related, that would be weird / illegal) and poached an Angelina Jolie interview off her back in the day #randomfact. It also made me realise how few books I read written by blokes! Anyway – back to the book – here’s the full blurb:

Pre-order this enthralling debut novel from Channel 4 F1 presenter Steve Jones – it’s Sliding Doors meets High Fidelity.
Bob Bloomfield is, in the words of his best friend’s wife, a ‘selfish, arrogant a*sehole’, who hasn’t spent a great deal of time making friends in his 49 years on earth.But what if he could change? What if Bob could stop the very thing that has made him the man he is, the death of his younger brother, Tom in 1986. If he could save Tom, could he save himself?. . . And what if all it took was a phone call – to his childhood self?”

The book starts with Bob – a single bloke, exactly the same age as me, with a successful career but possibly less successful private life – living between his bachelor pad and a fancy office. He heads off to a colleague’s fancy dress party – and when getting the outfit for this party comes across a retro mobile – and this is the key to the phonecalls to the past.

What happens next is all pretty far fetched (but time travelling stories don’t tend to be ‘real life’!!) but makes you question if you could make a phonecall back in time to change something – what effects could that have on how other things, other people’s lives etc turn out?

There are then a few different entwined iterations of the story encompassing Bob / Robert and his family and friends (and someone who is a friend of sorts in one timeline and family in another!)

Whilst the original Bob is not very likeable, you definitely find yourself rooting for him as the book progresses.

It’s very clever and enjoyable. Overall a fun, escapist read.

Many thanks to the publisher and NetGallet for my ARC – it came out this week on 11 May 2023.

Book Review: Only Love Can Hurt Like This by Paige Toon

Neither of them expected to fall in love. But sometimes life has other plans.
When Wren realises her fiancé is in love with someone else, she thinks her heart will never recover.
On the other side of the world, Anders lost his wife four years ago and is still struggling to move on.
Wren hopes that spending the summer with her dad and step-family on their farm in Indiana will help her to heal. There, amid the cornfields and fireflies, she and Anders cross paths and their worlds are turned upside-down again.
But Wren doesn’t know that Anders is harbouring a secret, and if he acts on any feelings he has for Wren it will have serious fall-out for everyone.
Walking away would hurt Wren more than she can imagine. But, knowing the truth, how can she possibly stay?

I was offered this ARC by NetGalley and the comments by other authors I enjoyed meant I said ‘yes please’.

I hadn’t read, what I would call, a standard romantic comedy for the last few books – and I fancied an escapist read and I really enjoyed this from the off.

Initially Wren is in the UK – but when her engagement falls apart, she takes herself across the Atlantic to stay with her Dad and his ‘new’ family in Indiana. The descriptions of the American countryside are fantastic – and I could really visualise the setting (and want to go and visit!)

The relationships between Wren and her Dad and step family are explored – along with new friendships with the locals – especially the neighbours Anders and Jonas.

I was really enjoying this escapist read and then BOOM there’s a twist! I had to go back to see if I’d somehow missed the clues – and with hindsight you can see they’re there – but it came as a total shock, which I really liked and shows how clever the author has been. And no spoilers here! This really changed the book for me into something deeper than ‘just’ a romcom. (Although there is always space for a well written romcom in my world.)

The book twists and turns through the final chapters in a brilliant way – and the ending has a perfect element of deja vu.

Overall I thoroughly enjoyed this book – and would definitely recommend you buy it when it’s out later this week.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for my advance review copy in exchange for an honest review.