This is my tourist attraction and book reviewing website, which also includes my writing work (and maybe a few other things too...) I am available for commissions. Copyright©Elaine Rockett
Tuesday 29 April 2014
I LOVE SHOES (PART 4...)
These Faith shoes were £19, reduced from £65 in the Debenhams sale. I love the gorgeous diamante butterfly effect at the front. Another of my favourite pairs!
I LOVE SHOES (PART 3...)
These pewter Roland Cartier beauties are one of my favourite pairs of shoes, and are currently being re-heeled. They were either £31 or £37, reduced from £70 and, quite frankly, were not worth that. Took forever to break in, initially made my toes bleed and seem to need to get them re-heeled after only a couple of wears.
Still, they do look lovely!
Monday 28 April 2014
I LOVE SHOES (PART 2...)
I also own these Vivienne Westwood shoes (Lady Dragon pink heart, as connoisseurs will be aware!)
Saw them in the shops for £120 and thought, bugger that. Kept my eyes peeled and found them on Ebay for £51 six months later. Patience is the key!
Sunday 27 April 2014
I LOVE SHOES....
I don't just spend my time reading, writing and blogging...Oh no, I also love shoes (my friends are sure my middle name is Imelda!)
Had my eye on these Debenhams luminescent babies for a while, but wasn't gonna pay 40 quid for them, no bloody way, I like a bargain!
Saturday 26 April 2014
MORE INNOCENT TIMES by IMOGEN PARKER
MORE
INNOCENT TIMES
BY
IMOGEN PARKER
THE
BLURB:-
Gemma
is ready for a change of scene. Her self-imposed exile in America
worked for a while, but now she's returning to England for a fresh
start. A new job, new house, new life beckons; but there are old
problems too, the same painful, raw problems she ran away from ten
years ago.
Daisy
stole Oliver from her. Her beloved sister just walked off with the
love of her life. They never talked about it. They haven't talked
about anything since.
This
is the story of two pairs of sisters- Gemma and Daisy, their mother
Estella and her sister Shirley. It tells of love and passion,
jealousy and secrets, and follows a family mystery back to its
origins in the 1950s- to more innocent times.
THE
REALITY:-
It
was nice for someone without a sister, like myself, to read this book and
try to understand how this complex relationship works. It is
enlightening to see how a lack of communication in any relationship
can cause severe problems.
It
is full of interesting, bohemian characters, but also maddening- you
want to kill Estella (who kills herself) for her stupidity in the
reasoning behind carrying out that very act. You also have to ask
the question; what the hell do Gemma and Daisy see in Oliver? He
doesn't seem that great to me- a bit of a pig at times would be
closer to the truth.
The
letters between Estella and Shirley offer a lovely highlight to the
novel, as do Shirley's intimate conversations with Gemma,
discussing her life in her seaside town.
Fast
paced, lively and modern, with people and situations you can really
believe in, this would be a lovely summer read.
GILLESPIE AND I by JANE HARRIS
GILLESPIE
AND I
BY
JANE HARRIS
THE
BLURB:-
1933,
London. Harriet Baxter decides to put straight, once and for all,
the truth about her life and the fate of an artist called Ned
Gillespie.
Decades
earlier, Harriet arrives in Glasgow in time for the International
Exhibition. A young art lover of independent means, Harriet becomes
friend and champion to the up-and-coming painter Ned Gillespie. She
is embraced by his extended, somewhat troubled family and soon
becomes a fixture in their lives. But when tragedy strikes the
Gillespies, Harriet's connection with them disintegrates into
mystery, deception and potentially life-changing accusations.
THE
REALITY:-
Wow!
This was one huge tome. I was torn between finding it long-winded,
yet gloriously detailed. I don't suppose you get one without the
other.
Glasgow
and its characters were brought magically to life, via our modern
anti-heroine. She's unconventional in that she's independent,
doesn't want to be married, and she does thoroughly modern things for
a woman in 1888, such as (shock, horror!) smoke.
A
totally unique concept; the Scottish “Not Proven” verdict is not
something I have ever encountered before. Fans of Carry On films
will love the salacious content and language, as domestic and prison
situations are bought wickedly to life.
This
book will madden you, and you can really sympathize with Harriet as
she gets set up, and the impotence she feels at not being able to
do an awful lot about it. The is she/ isn't she question of the
identity of 1933 Harriet's maid will have you turning the pages to
the very end.
A
good read, not for the fainthearted!
THE SAVAGE GARDEN by MARK MILLS
THE
SAVAGE GARDEN
BY
MARK MILLS
THE
BLURB:-
Behind
a villa in the heart of Tuscany lies a Renaissance garden of
enchanting beauty. Its grottos, pagan statues and classical
inscriptions seem to have a secret life of their own- and a secret
message, too, for those with eyes to read it.
Young
scholar Adam Strickland is just such a person. Arriving in 1958, he
finds the Docci family, their house and the unique garden as
seductive as each other. But post-war Italy is still a strange, even
dangerous, place and the Doccis have some dark skeletons hidden away
in their past.
Before
this mysterious and beautiful summer ends, Adam will uncover two
stories of love, revenge and murder, separated by 400 years... but is
another tragedy about to be added to the villa's cursed history?
THE
REALITY:-
For
me, it was good to read a book written by a male author, from the
point of view of a man (for a change!) and great to see relationships
and sex explored from the masculine perspective.
This
was extremely well researched and was a lesson in itself- it made me
want to look into mythology and the works of Dante myself. The
character of Adam comes across as very learned, and the author
certainly knows his subject.
The
drawing at the beginning of the novel was a good touch and essential
for making sense of the story; it could have been more detailed,
though. The direct speech between Signora Docci and Maria was
lovely, and added individuality to an already good read.
This
was a classy take on a murder mystery, which was as much about life
inside the villa and seeing the local sights as finding out what
really went on 400 years ago, and more recently. This was like an adult version of the Nancy Drew Mystery Stories, which, as a child, I simply could not get enough of. The concept of a
hidden room (often featured in novels!) in the shape of a locked top
floor naturally made you want to explore and find out what's secreted
there.
The
book reached a gentle climax, and you kind of knew what was coming,
which was a shame.
THE DEBUTANTE by KATHLEEN TESSARO
THE
DEBUTANTE
BY
KATHLEEN TESSARO
THE
BLURB:-
A
locked room. A collection of faded mementoes hidden in a shoebox.
And
two strangers, reluctantly drawn to one another, cataloguing the
contents of an abandoned mansion overlooking the sea.
But
Endsleigh is no ordinary house. Between the Wars, it was the home of
Britain's most dazzling debutantes- the Blythe sisters. Until one of
them went missing...
THE
REALITY:-
This
novel had a lovely cover showing a lady in a beautiful red dress
highlighted against a black and white background. Gimme that dress!
Shorten it to knee length, and I'll wear it now!
The
story is slow-paced and straightforwardly simple: fans of the louche,
decadent 1920s with its bright young things will love it, fans of the
arty Victoria and Albert museum will understand it, those with an
artistic bent themselves (such as character Cate, a reproductive
artist who also paints a powerful and unconventional nude portrait)
will get it and those who love the concept of a locked, “Bluebeard”
room will want to turn the pages to the very end.
The
historical letters between Baby and Irene, which only we, and not the
characters, see tie the story together and help to make sense of it.
The intensity of irresistible relationships and the consequences of
such infidelity are explored exquisitely.
Maybe
it would have been good to have “Mrs. Healy” examined in more
detail. And maybe finding out what happened to the birthmarked baby
would have been nice. But maybe we don't want to know, and like the
sense of mystery such evasiveness brings about.
A
clever and stylish story.
Thursday 17 April 2014
THE SECRETS BETWEEN US by LOUISE DOUGLAS
THE
SECRETS BETWEEN US
BY
LOUISE DOUGLAS
THE
BLURB:-
When
Sarah meets dark, brooding Alex, she grasps his offer of a new life
miles away from her own. They've both recently escaped broken
relationships, and need to start again. Why not do it together?
But
when Sarah gets to the tiny village of Burrington Stoke, something
doesn't add up. Alex's beautiful wife Genevieve was charming,
talented and adored by all who knew her. And apparently, she and
Alex had a successful marriage complete with a gorgeous son, Jamie.
Why would Genevieve walk out on her perfect life? And why has no one
heard from her since?
Genevieve's
family and all her friends think that Alex knows more about her
disappearance than he's letting on. But Sarah's fallen in love with
him and just knows he couldn't have anything to hide. Or could he?
THE
REALITY:-
Definitely
an interesting tale, but I'm not sure that I pick up much in the way
of passion between the two main characters- more a clinging
desperation as they each try and get their lives together in the face
of the separate tragedies they have endured. I'm sure this was
probably the intention of the author, considering what these two
people have gone- and are still going- through.
Hailed
as a story reminiscent of Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca, it's a sadder
love story; far more basic, less haunting and nowhere near as
romantic.
The
one character that shines through is the one you never see, and
that's Genevieve. I suppose this is an obvious conclusion- as she's
left totally to the imagination of the reader, she's the person that
can become almost exactly you want her to be. The supernatural way
she haunts Avalon- Alex's cottage- adds a spooky and atmospheric
suspense of drama that draws you to her character and makes you
sympathetic to her. She's also the kind of person that's not all
she appears to be on the surface, which makes her intriguing.
She's
not the only character who's not on the level, and the real villain
of the piece turns out to be a someone you really didn't expect. The
way human emotions and relationships ebb and flow is wonderfully
displayed, (especially between Sarah and Jamie) as is the theme of
healing and forgiveness. The storyline is very good, the plot a well-thought-out page
turner and a sharp, and often unpleasant, insight into village life.
I
would certainly recommend this novel, but would have maybe liked a
bit of a happier ending?
Wednesday 16 April 2014
THE TURNING POINT by JUDITH LENNOX.
THE
TURNING POINT
BY
JUDITH LENNOX
THE
BLURB:-
1952:
Ellen Kingsley travels to Gildersleve Hall in Cambridgeshire to work
for renowned scientist Marcus Pharoah. But her pride in her new
career falters as she finds herself caught up in the rivalries,
desires and ambitions of her colleagues. When a tragedy occurs, the
course of Ellen's life is changed forever.
In
London, Ellen encounters an old friend, India Mayhew. But the events
at Gildersleve continue to cast a shadow and India's involvement with
Pharoah ignites a trail of destruction. After Ellen falls in love
with dashing Scotsman Alec Hunter, both women must confront the
revelations and passions of the past before their path to future
happiness becomes clear.
THE
REALITY:-
I've
read most of Judith Lennox's novels and they don't disappoint.
Although not my favourite offering of hers, this book certainly
wasn't the worst.
What
I love about her writing is not just the working of the characters,
but the sense of time and place that is offered up through
descriptiveness. This is a book that you can really “get into”
and imagine being a part of.
I
do think that novels can be as good as informative non-fiction for
offering insight into something that is totally foreign to the
reader- in this case the world of the geeky scientist. It is not a field I
know much about, but I finished this novel a little less in the dark.
Ditto the remote Scots island family home of the character Alec, and
Vermont, where Marcus Pharoah goes to live with India. Both places
are beautifully described and you get a real feel for actually being
there.
There
is a dark and mysterious element that begins at the start of the
novel and runs a thread throughout, adding a backbone to a very believable cast.
I
love the way human relationships and upsets are so carefully and
realistically detailed, including the nasty death that leaves two
young children orphaned and the impact it has on them, and one
character's mental illness (bipolar disorder, if I am not mistaken)
and the effect it has on her husband. The strange, ghostly goings on in Mrs. Hunter's house, and her obsession with her dead husband really kept me reading well past my bedtime!
1950s
London came alive for me, from struggles with employment, glamour,
living conditions and organised crime. Make time to read this or, if
it doesn't appeal, give another Judith Lennox novel a go!
BLONDES by PAULA YATES
BLONDES
BY
PAULA YATES
THE
BLURB:-
Paula
Yates's last book was acclaimed by Andy Warhol as “The greatest
work of art in the last decade.” Now the wisecracking blonde
bombshell, bestselling writer, columnist and TV personality strikes
again with a new history of the last two thousand years- the biggest
pack of lies since Watergate.
The
only gift for the blonde in your life.
THE
REALITY:-
So
much has been discussed regarding the tragic demise of Paula Yates
(in the news again recently, due to the shocking and premature death
of her daughter, Peaches) that it's sometimes all too easy to forget
what a talented presenter and writer she was.
An
icon of the 1980s, in terms of publicity she was up there with the
other newsworthy blondes of her day: Princess Diana, Margaret
Thatcher and Samantha Fox. Individual and opinionated, presenter of
music programme The Tube and wife of Sir Bob, she was the epitome of
the coolest of cool.
As
a young teenager being (of course!) up to date with all the trends
myself, I coveted this book. I couldn't afford it though (I believe
the hardback version was £20 at the time and I had never even seen
so much money!) and had to sate my interest by flicking through a
copy owned by a pretentious friend. That is, until recently, when I
remembered its existence and picked it up from Amazon.
Why
I should be interested in a book about blondes is maybe beyond me.
After all, I am naturally a very dark brunette and (apart from a
pre-teen experiment with peroxide that left me with an orange fringe,
and a mid-teen liking for red and white streaks) ecstatically happy
to stay that way. I've also tended to admire dark haired female role
models more, and think properly dark hair is more attractive than
light (but don't tell my boyfriend, he's a dirty blonde!)
This
book is a coffee table gem and-a-half. Part truthful research (in
the days before the internet) and part pure conjecture, it is
cleverly written with a tongue-in-cheek style. Featuring blonde (mainly female) icons from every possible age; from biblical
times through to fairy tale princesses, stars of the silver screen, royalty,
politics and advertising, it is certainly full of interesting
content, discussed in a comedic way. Okay, the definition of
“blonde” is maybe stretched a little- I always thought Elizabeth
I and Boadicea were redheads- but we'll let Paula Yates have her
artistic licence as the book has a lot of depth to it and is a great
and funny read.
Slightly
outdated in terms of humour, you'll still love the accompanying
pictures, artworks and quotes. I would have loved to have read more books like this. It's such a shame that Paula Yates couldn't sort her shit out.
Tuesday 15 April 2014
THE SECRET KEEPER by KATE MORTON
THE
SECRET KEEPER
BY
KATE MORTON
THE
BLURB:-
1961:
On a sweltering summer's day, while her family picnic by a stream on
their Suffolk farm, sixteen-year-old Laurel hides out in her
childhood tree house dreaming of the bright future she just can't
wait to seize. But before the idyllic afternoon is over, Laurel will
have witnessed a shocking crime that changes everything.
2011:
Now a much-loved actress, Laurel finds herself overwhelmed by shades
of the past. Haunted by memories, and the mystery of what she saw
that day, she returns to the family home and begins to piece together
a secret history; a tale of three strangers from vastly different
worlds- Dorothy, Vivian and Jimmy- who are brought together by chance
in wartime London and whose lives become fiercely and fatefully
entwined.
Shifting
between the 1930s, the 1960s and the present, this is a spellbinding
story of mysteries and secrets, murder and enduring love.
THE
REALITY:-
Wow!
I have read Kate Morton before, and always find myself asking;
where the hell does she get all her clever ideas from?! I only hope
that my brain turns out to be as creative and fertile as hers, and
that my writing manages to draw readers in with the same intensity
that draws me into her stories.
This
is another full-on and in-depth read, tailor made for lovers of
family sagas. It highlights human relationships and not just of the
romantic variety- the relationships between siblings, the
relationships between parents and their children, estrangement, and
the way people from the same family can be so very different are all
tackled and explained sufficiently. I like the way that the book
explores the concept that scratching below the surface of a seemingly
idyllic situation can reveal something altogether more sinister. I
also loved the way mild mental illness became a theme through the
character of Dolly, who lives out her own fantasies via her own
narcissistic personality disorder.
Like
the writings of Charles Dickens, there are many separate little
stories going on within the main theme, which makes for strong and
believable characters in a multi-faceted novel which takes you on a
journey that does have a surprising and clever twist to it. It is
clearly laid out, so it's easy to differentiate between the different
perspectives, places and time frames.
Sensitively
written, so that it's easy to sympathize with some characters and absolutely hate others, this is not a novel you will be able to put
down in a hurry!
Monday 14 April 2014
THE RIVAL QUEENS by FIDELIS MORGAN
THE
RIVAL QUEENS
BY
FIDELIS MORGAN
THE
BLURB:-
It's
1699 and those intrepid heroines the Countess Ashby de la Zouche and
her maidservant Alpiew are once more scavenging for scandal for that
scurrilous rag, the London Trumpet. But with the bailiffs in hot
pursuit they are reduced to seeking refuge in a concert hall. No
sooner have they settled down for an evening of tedium than one of
the players staggers onto the stage, her hands dripping with blood- a
doyenne has been decapitated under their very noses.
The
unlikely sleuths find themselves with an abundance of suspects:
players, ruffians in pink ribbons, a Punch and Judy man- not to
mention a painter with a silver proboscis. Their pursuit of the
culprit takes them from the Tower of London to Bedlam, with a brief
detour via the fields of Wapping. With a little help from Pepys and
a lot of laughs and mayhem along the way they uncover a web of
corruption that extends to the highest echelons of society.
THE
REALITY:-
The
person who bought me this book was not wrong in thinking that I would
love it- a bodice ripping carry-on of a thrill set in
post-Restoration London, with reproachable characters, naughty
ladies, mystery, wrongdoings and intrigue. As a lover of Forever
Amber, by Kathleen Windsor, this period in history tends to excite
me.
But
I have tried. For... oh, ten years now, this book has sat on my
shelf. In that time I have tried to read it no less than three
times, the last time very recently! I managed to get to around page
100- but I still could not tell you much about what went on, as the
words seemed to flow in through one ear and out of the other.
Maybe
it was the somewhat slapstick style of writing. Maybe it was the
stupid, childish names of some of the characters. But whatever it
was, I could just not get into this novel so, sadly, it's finally
going into the charity bag.
Maybe
one of you would like to read it and give me an opinion?
THE GLASS PAINTER'S DAUGHTER by RACHEL HORE
THE
GLASS PAINTER'S DAUGHTER
BY
RACHEL HORE
THE
BLURB:-
In
a tiny glass-stained shop in the hidden backstreets of Westminster
lies the cracked, sparkling image of an angel.
The
owners of Minster Glass have also been broken: Fran Morrison's mother
died when she was a baby; a painful event never mentioned by her
difficult father Edward. Fran left home to pursue a career as a
classical musician. But now Edward is dangerously ill and it's time
to return.
Taking
her father's place in the shop, she and his craftsman Zac accept a
beguiling commission- to restore a shattered glass picture of an
exquisite angel belonging to a local church. As they reassemble the
dazzling shards of coloured glass, they uncover an extraordinary love
story from the Victorian past, sparked by the window's creation.
Slowly, Fran begins to see her own reflection in its themes of
passion, tragedy and redemption.
Fran's
journey will lead he on a search for the truth about her mother,
through mysteries of past times and the anguish of unrequited love,
to reconciliation and renewal.
THE
REALITY:-
This
was one of those books that easily slips between two times and places
(1993 and the early 1880's), as Fran researched the history of the
stained glass angel and how it tied in with her ancestry.
The
writer has gone into great depth shaping her main characters, dipping
into the world of classical music, and the artistry and techniques
involved with stained glass workmanship. And it's paid off, with the
creation of a truly lovely, yet melancholy story.
I
like the way that Fran's difficult relationship with her father and
the mystery regarding her mother adds a sense of intrigue that you
just have to get to the bottom of, and way the Laura's dilemma's
becomes central to the main theme. Family relationships, especially
those that are less than perfect (as so many are) are deeply delved
into, and these help to explain the characters foibles with a large
dose of reality. In fact, a lovely contrast within this book is the
way a hefty chunk of modern realism is mixed with the other
worldliness of the past and the truly fantastical question of the
existence of real angels.
I
also absolutely loved all the angel orientated quotations at the
forefront of each chapter- they gave a beautiful touch to the novel.
Definitely one to give a go!
BORN BAD by JOSEPHINE COX
BORN
BAD
BY
JOSEPHINE COX
THE
BLURB:-
Eighteen
years ago, Harry made a hard decision that drove him out from the
place he loved. Since then he carved out a life for himself, and
found a semblance of peace. Yet he is still haunted by the memory of
the warm carefree girl with the laughing eyes.
For
Judy Saunders, the pain of her past has left her deeply scarred. Cut
off from her family and trapped in a loveless marriage, the distant
memories of her first love are her only source of comfort in a dark
and dangerous world.
Years
later, Harry is heading back. Excited, afraid and racked with guilt,
he has little choice. He must confront the past and seek
forgiveness.
THE
REALITY:-
I've
always wanted to read Josephine Cox's books, as they looked like the
kind of family sagas that I get on well with. I just maybe wish I
hadn't chosen this one? It was very gritty and real, in the style of
Catherine Cookson, but was perhaps a bit too depressing for my taste.
Set
in 1956, at 468 pages long the book was very thick, considering it's
only dealing with the time span of a few months. It was therefore
full of glorious detail (which I always prefer to too little) with a
great plot:- the question of what really went on with
fourteen-year-old Judy and her baby was the issue that kept me
turning the pages.
I
did find the characters extremely stereotyped, but was very
glad of the much-needed happy ending! The twist regarding who was
the real villain of the piece was also pleasantly unexpected.
I'd
certainly give this author another go.
Friday 11 April 2014
MR. HAU (CHINESE RESTAURANT IN EASTBOURNE)
I recently went for a short break to Eastbourne. Although the weather was foul, we did not let it spoil our fun!
I can thoroughly recommend The Pier Hotel, where we stayed, but can thoroughly NOT recommend Mr Hau's chinese restaurant. Here is a copy of my review, to be found on Tripadvisor. Eat there at your peril!!!!
“Revolting attitude, food not much better”
I had a bad feeling the minute my partner and I entered this restaurant- I just wished I had acted on it and left there and then.
We were not made to feel particularly welcome and were given a minuscule table, wedged in between two other couples, despite there being other, better places to be seated at.
The food was edible although nothing spectacular. The crispy duck was cremated, and the beef in the curry was tough and gristly- a bit like chewing on an old plimsoll.
The food was not itemized on the bill and they charged me 80p for two extra pancakes to go with the duck ( they offered us 4 or 6, I chose 6 as this is what you usually get in other restaurants, with any extra often thrown in for free).
I then refused to pay all of the cheeky 10% tip that automatically appeared on my bill. Whilst I am not averse to tipping, I will decide exactly how much, thank you very much. This resulted in the waitress returning and moaning that I had not paid "the full amount". When I refused, the owner was brought out of the kitchen to show me the menu, where it states that 10% automatically gets added onto every bill. I pointed out that this was not something that he could legally enforce and he shut up. This resulted in us being duly ignored when we got up, said goodbye and left, not that I could care a toss.
Avoid like the plague- a very bad experience.
We were not made to feel particularly welcome and were given a minuscule table, wedged in between two other couples, despite there being other, better places to be seated at.
The food was edible although nothing spectacular. The crispy duck was cremated, and the beef in the curry was tough and gristly- a bit like chewing on an old plimsoll.
The food was not itemized on the bill and they charged me 80p for two extra pancakes to go with the duck ( they offered us 4 or 6, I chose 6 as this is what you usually get in other restaurants, with any extra often thrown in for free).
I then refused to pay all of the cheeky 10% tip that automatically appeared on my bill. Whilst I am not averse to tipping, I will decide exactly how much, thank you very much. This resulted in the waitress returning and moaning that I had not paid "the full amount". When I refused, the owner was brought out of the kitchen to show me the menu, where it states that 10% automatically gets added onto every bill. I pointed out that this was not something that he could legally enforce and he shut up. This resulted in us being duly ignored when we got up, said goodbye and left, not that I could care a toss.
Avoid like the plague- a very bad experience.
THE RIVER HOUSE by MARGARET LEROY
THE
RIVER HOUSE
BY
MARGARET LEROY
THE
BLURB:-
Ginnie
Holmes has found something she never intended to find- an
overwhelming passion for a man she should not be with. At an
abandoned boathouse hidden on the river bank of the Thames, Ginnie
steps into a world that's just a little bit brighter than her
ordinary life. An escape from an empty marriage and a drifting life.
A
terrifying event means the lovers' secret becomes a deadly
catastrophe. And Ginnie finds herself in the path of extraordinary
danger, not only facing the exposure and grief she has feared, but
endangering herself and everyone she loves.
THE
REALITY:-
Ginnie's
marriage is empty, although her family life, and her career are not.
But during one of her romantic rendezvous with her lover, she spots a
stranger behaving suspiciously. Murderous events mean that she is
faced with a moral dilemma- does she say what she saw and risk
everything, or keep quiet?
This
is a very middle class take on the subject of extra-marital affairs.
All the characters are well-educated, have good jobs and live in nice
areas. They are well-rounded, carefully drawn, much defined by their
careers and have enough substance and detail about them to be
interesting. I personally know the area where the novel is set, so a
sense of place was easy to envisage.
But
somehow, the supposed passion of the affair all seems lost. When
Ginnie and Will (also married) get together, their trysts seem way
too seedy to be anything special. Maybe this was the intention of
the writer, but the love scenes are very base, and the ending of the
relationship comes across as lacking, and not very emotional.
Although their passion is supposed to be “overwhelming” that
doesn't come across at all, and the whole thing seems mapped out by
Ginnie and Will from the start.
Ginnie
eventually does the right thing from the point of view of her
conscience and a murderer gets convicted, but it's a story that seems
to drift off into nothing rather than have any sense of a real
climatic ending (although the part where Ginnie's daughter goes
missing does have a sense of tension). In fact it's Ginnie's
relationship with her daughter, rather than Will, that comes across
as more interesting.
Light,
bright and trite. You kind of know how this would continue if there
were to be a sequel. An OK read, but nothing to rock the boat.
SISTERS by LINDA LAUREN
SISTERS
BY
LINDA LAUREN
THE
BLURB:-
Kate
and Alice are sisters who are so different and yet so much the same.
Kate,
the one who'd done something with the looks and sense of style they'd
both shared. Her life: the world of fashion and fashionable places.
Keeping in touch between trips abroad. A world of airports and
exotic destinations, spring collections and sensuous fabric, of
beautiful people and immaculately skin-deep emotions.
Alice,
her twin and once inseparable companion. Living now in the suburbs
with a nice, boyish husband and a house that's always a mess.
Alice
pregnant, then Alice a mother: lovingly flustered and scatty, almost-
but never quite- coping. Both women a warm, living reproach to the
other as Kate, coolly organized, descends to help out her sister's
crises.
Each
woman with an ache of regret for what might have been. Neither
foreseeing that her way of life was not as stable as she thought.
THE
REALITY:-
I
read Linda Lauren as a teenager, and her other two novels explored
the journey of pubescent girls growing into women in a completely
unique way. This book deals with twin sisters whose lives have taken
very different paths.
At
128 pages long, this was probably the shortest book I've read since I
was a kid. Also, having 20 pages missing in the centre of the novel
was not a positive thing! On close inspection, looking carefully at
the spine, it looks as if they were never there in the first place,
as opposed to having fallen out, or having been cut out...most
strange! But I found that this, thankfully, didn't mar the story too much.
Linda
Lauren writes in a gritty and very real
way, exploring many of the issues that affect working class young
women. Although the book was written in 1983, everything inside here
holds a strong relevance today.
Perfectly
groomed Kate works in fashion and reconnects with the sister she's
been out of touch with for a while. Alice lives in happy domestic
chaos with an adoring husband, popping out children in quick
succession. But neither of their lives are as happy as they appear
on the surface- Kate is married to a harsh, self-centred,
perfectionist of a man and Alice doesn't feel she can accommodate the
third child that is already on its way.
I
like the way women's problems are dealt with; the medical realities
of difficult pregnancies and childbirth, the struggles trying to run
a home and raise a young family and the question of abortion. I also
like that the story is tinged with more radical ideas, such as Kate
experiencing severe abdominal pain as Alice goes into labour. I love
the way the relationship between these siblings is explored and
explained.
But
most of all I loved the ending, with its very, very, VERY unexpected
twist. Certainly worth a read.
THE DISTANT HOURS by KATE MORTON
THE
DISTANT HOURS
BY
KATE MORTON
THE
BLURB:-
Edie
Burchill and her mother have never been close, but when a long-lost
letter arrives one Sunday afternoon, with the return address of
Milderhurst Castle, Kent, printed upon its envelope, Edie begins to
suspect that her mother's emotional distance masks an old secret.
Evacuated
from London as a thirteen year old girl, Edie's mother was chosen by
the mysterious Juniper Blythe and taken to live at Milderhurst Castle
by the Blythe family.
Fifty
years later, Edie too is drawn to the castle and the eccentric
Sisters Blythe. Old ladies now, the three still live together, the
twins nursing Juniper, whose abandonment by her fiancé in 1941
plunged her into madness.
Inside
the decaying castle, Edie begins to unravel her mother's past. But
there are other secrets hidden in the stones of Milderhurst Castle,
and Edie is about to learn more than she expected. The truth of what
happened in the distant hours has been waiting a long time for
someone to find it.
THE
REALITY:-
Kate
Morton writes in a fascinating way, in layer upon layer of
information that slips seamlessly from wartime to 1992, from the deep
perspective of one character to another. She also adds the
“fictional” writings of the Sisters Blythe's father, Raymond
Blythe- these seem so real that you find yourself questioning whether
the man actually existed!
I
can really identify with the main character Edie: a creative woman
who lives within her own head, as many imaginative people do. She is
someone who's a book person (to the point of being obsessed by books)
rather than a people person. The 1990s sections are all via Edie's
voice and written in the first person, which gives a lovely contrast
to the other parts of the novel and helps the reader to avoid
confusion.
The
novel also deals with the difficulties that lie within families, such
as being the one member who doesn't fit in with the rest, the lack of
closeness that can exist between mother and daughter (noted in both
the modern and historical sections) and the way mental illness can be
passed down through the generations.
This
is a meaty tome of a book for serious readers, and not for the fainthearted! But it will draw you in and not let you get away. A must
for those of you who love stories regarding mysterious, whispering
buildings that contain deep secrets and fascinating occupants within
their walls. I seriously recommend this novel as it drew me in and
wouldn't let me leave until the very last end.