Book Review: The Sisterhood Rules by Kathy Lette

“The Sisterhood Rules:

1. Never let a man come between you
2. Share all your secrets
3. Live life to the fullest – girls just wanna have fun


For twin sisters Isabel and Verity, the sisterhood rules were shattered when Verity had an affair with Izzy’s husband. Unforgivable, right? Devastated by her sister’s betrayal, Izzy casts Verity into social Siberia.
But when their mother goes missing, Verity and Izzy are forced to come together again to find her. And then the estranged sisters’ problems only get bigger. Their mother has a new younger lover and where there’s a will… he’d clearly like to be in it.
Can they stop their mother making a dreadful mistake? And in doing so find a way to bury the pain of the past?
Full of laugh-out-loud humour and devastating pathos, Kathy Lette’s brilliant new novel takes us on a roller-coaster ride which proves that from pain comes healing, from honesty comes forgiveness, and that nothing is more important than your sisters.”

I’ve always enjoyed books by Kathy Lette. They are fast paced and wise cracking and a definite #womanpower genre. So when I saw she had a new book out this year, I was delighted to be granted an advance review copy by Net Galley.

The book follows the story of estranged sisters Izzy and Verity as they try and track down their missing mother, Nicole. The women all work in music in some way, shape or form – which was interestingly explored. There are also geographical location switches – whilst all now live in London (having relocated from Australia when the twins were little) the book takes us to European mountains and Derry for different chunks of the storyline.

There is also a wide variety of supporting cast – from Johnny (Izzy’s husband that Verity stole), Chrissie (Izzy and Johnny’s teenage daughter), Gawain (Nicole’s new alpine horn playing toy boy), Fiachra (Izzy’s guitar student) and Melissa (Nicole’s long suffering manager) who all interweave in the storyline. I particularly enjoyed the interactions between Izzy and Chrissie – having kids of a similar age!

As expected – the book is full of puns, one liners, caustic asides that you would expect from a Kathy Lette book – and if that’s what you want, then it’s perfect – but it can get a bit exhausting. I felt reading this was like spending time with someone who has ADHD – you need to have a lie down in a dark room to decompress afterwards!

Thank you to Net Galley and the publishers for my ARC – I thought from Net Galley it was out in June, but I’m now thinking that might only be in certain geographical areas – as it appears to be out in the UK already!

Book Review: HRT: Husband Replacement Therapy by Kathy Lette

“An outrageously funny, heartbreaking read – when Ruby finds out she has cancer on the brink of her 50th birthday, she decides to start living instead of complying…
Ruby has always been the generous mediator among her friends, family and colleagues, which is why they’ve all turned up to celebrate her 50th birthday.
But after too many glasses of champers, Ruby takes her moment in the spotlight to reveal what she really thinks of every one of them. She accuses her husband of having an affair and lambasts her mother for a lifetime of playing her three daughters against each other – it’s blisteringly brutal.
As the stunned gathering gawks at Ruby, the birthday girl reveals that she has terminal cancer, and has cashed in her life savings to take her two estranged sisters cruising into the sunset for a dose of HRT – Husband Replacement Therapy. But is Ruby being courageous or ruthlessly selfish?”

Having just turned 50 and with 2 sisters myself – I felt I had to say yes to an advance review copy of this! (Although thankfully I got through my 50th without a cancer diagnosis or upsetting anyone, despite too many glasses of champagne!)

I have to say when I started the book it felt incredibly similar to another Kathy Lette book I read recently, and whilst the wise-cracking humour was amusing – I wasn’t sure I could cope with something almost identikit – group of middle aged women against the entire male population. I almost gave up – but I’m glad I didn’t – as once the sisters were back from the cruise the book improved dramatically and had much more interesting storylines.

It looked at sibling relationships as well as romantic relationships, plus parental ones both as the parent and as the offspring. I also loved the setting in Sydney (having lived and worked there for a few months back in 1999 – it will always have a special place in my heart)

Overall I enjoyed the book – and I think most women of a certain age would! (But I won’t be booking on a cougar cruise any time soon!!)

Thanks to the publisher and Net Galley for my ARC – and it’s out NOW if you fancy the sound of it!

Book Review: The Revenge Club by Kathy Lette

Whilst I’ve followed Kathy Lette on social media for years – I don’t think I’ve ever read one of her books before (and I definitely have never reviewed one on here) – but when I saw she had a new book out, I managed to get an advance review copy off Net Galley. Now weirdly on Net Galley it says it’s not out until August 2024 (but I now wonder if that’s a US release date perhaps?) as it appears to already be out on Kindle – and imminently released as a hard back – and Kathy has been having a fabulous time on book tour in her native Australia and has now started on a UK book tour! But at least that means I’m not tempting you loads in advance, and you can order it immediately if you like the sound of it?! So here’s the blurb:

WHEN THE ODDS ARE AGAINST YOU, IT’S TIME TO GET EVEN.
Matilda, Jo, Penny and Cressy are all women at the top of their game; so imagine their surprise when they start to be personally overlooked and professionally pushed aside by less-qualified men.
Only they’re not going down without a fight.
Society might think the women have passed their amuse-by dates but the Revenge Club have other plans.
After all, why go to bed angry when you could stay up and plot diabolical retribution? Let the games begin…”

The main character in the book is Matilda – who is an Australian born writer now living in London, with 2 children (one of whom is autistic) and is separated from their father (now, this does sound vaguely familiar when compared to the writer’s own life – but ‘write what you know’ is often said!)

Tilly reunites – after 30+ years – with 3 friends she was in a band with at University (Louche Women is a most excellent band name!) but has lost touch with since. Jo has been in the US working on movies, Penny is a news anchor and Cressy is an actress married to a high flying lawyer with 4 daughters. All 4 women – as they approach their late 50s – have experienced issues with being a woman of a certain age – and so come together – as The Revenge Club – to, as the name suggests, take their revenge!

Whilst the book is silly and funny and frequently made me laugh out loud – it also covers important topics facing women of a certain age, but in a very entertaining way.

The ‘Revenge’ plans twist and turn during the plot of the book and keep you guessing right to the end – but the development of the main characters is great and the relationships between them all. I also really enjoyed how Tilly’s kids came into their own in the book – with kids a similar age I could very much empathise with Tilly’s initial frustrations!

Overall this was a fantastic, escapist and hilarious read – and perfect for those of us 50+

A huge thank you to the publishers and Net Galley for my ARC.