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
Monday, 22 April 2024
MISS ELAINEOUS VISITS QUEEN ELIZABETH'S HUNTING LODGE...
Friday, 19 April 2024
YOUTUBE VALENTINES PARK PART 2 LIVE...
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Wednesday, 17 April 2024
HOLD THE DREAM by BARBARA TAYLOR BRADFORD
by
BARBARA TAYLOR BRADFORD
THE
BLURB:
Emma Harte was the heroine of Barbara Taylor Bradford's multi-million copy bestseller
A WOMAN OF SUBSTANCE
Now she is eighty years old and ready to hand over the reins of the vast business empire she has created.
To her favourite grandchild, Paula McGill Fairley, Emma bequeaths her mighty retailing empire with these heartfelt words: “I charge you to hold my dream.”
HOLD THE DREAM
is the glorious sequel to the story of Emma Harte. A towering international success, this is the powerfully moving story of one woman's determination to “hold the dream” which was entrusted to her- and in so doing so find the happiness and passion which is her legacy.
THE REALITY:
I have seen this book reviewed- and we're talking back in 1985 when it was first released!- with the opinion that this is nowhere near in the same league as A Woman of Substance. That was a mighty family saga, spacing over a period of 65 years and this takes in only two years yet, at over 800 pages, is quite a tome. It's the second time around for me with this book and, although it kept me entertained, I do get where that reviewer was coming from (by the way, I was 13/14 at the time, and the review was in teenage girls' magazine MIZZ. Does that even exist any more?)
A Woman of Substance is my favourite novel ever, and I've reviewed it here:-
https://elainerockett.blogspot.com/2020/08/a-woman-of-substance-by-barbara-taylor.html
The TV mini-series first brought it to my attention, and actually moved me to tears! I have seen the TV mini-series to Hold The Dream as well. I suppose, like the book, it was entertaining but not in the same league as its predecessor.
This book did have the odd typo and misuse/ misspelling of words (schadenfreude? You betcha!)😉 To me the biggest disappointment was the lack of information about the Fairley family. I would have loved for Emma's original antagonists to come into play more. I also didn't quite get that the first novel was built around the notion of Paula, Emma's favourite granddaughter, falling in love with a forbidden Fairley. So why now have her fall out of love with him? It kind of grated.
I suppose you had to have the trouble with Edwina's family in Ireland and the death of her daughter-in-law to give the story a bit of bumph and fill it out but that was all that it was- bumph. I am glad that Edwina made up with her mother, though. Again, I would have loved to have Edwina exploring her Fairley bloodline in detail. That would have made for a fascinating storyline.
Unfortunately I wasn't writing the book! If you've read A Woman of Substance maybe think about giving Hold The Dream a miss. It would have been better to leave this series at the first book, methinks.
Monday, 15 April 2024
YOUTUBE VALENTINES PARK PART 1 LIVE...
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Friday, 12 April 2024
YOUTUBE VALENTINES MANSION VLOG LIVE...
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Saturday, 23 March 2024
A CONSPIRACY OF BONES by KATHY REICHS
A CONSPIRACY OF BONES
by
KATHY REICHS
THE BLURB:
EVERY
A corpse with no hands.
BODY
A decade-old missing child case, full of buried lies.
HAS
A connection between them that only one person can find. And the more Temperance Brennan uncovers, the darker and more twisted the picture becomes.
SECRETS
THE REALITY:
Top marks for the display of the blurb at the back of the book! Arty in its conception, it did everything it was supposed to do in terms of arousing my interest.
I read this in fits and starts, and it was quite easy to pick up and regain the thread, especially as at some point in our heroine does the same- she's suffering from health problems to do with her head plus a possible concussion/ poisoning, and she needs to get her thoughts in order. With the Tempe Brennan novels, I always find her personal life (especially her relationship with Ryan) as intriguing as the crime elements to the story. Incidentally, the head problem is based on the author's real life experience, as are the bases for the crime element of all of her stories.
I've read most of the Tempe Brennan series and, to my mind, nothing will ever be as good as Deja Dead; her first novel. A Conspiracy of Bones was good, and tripped along nicely, but somehow failed to touch me. I'm glad she managed to score one up against her professional protagonist, Margot Heavner, and brought the case to some kind of conclusion, but to my mind too many parts were not tied up. All of the missing children were not explained (but maybe that's real life?) and the reason Tempe ended up in hospital was shoved right out to the back burner and I'm still extremely confused about that. Yet I don't feel the urge to re-read the novel for clarification. (Maybe I shouldn't read crime novels in fits and starts?)
What I enjoyed most were the mix of- often unsavoury- characters, and you do get a sense of reality, and the damages life can inflict upon some people- especially war veteran Duncan Keesing. But other books in this series seem to have some kind of melodramatic section that there's a real build-up to, and that was lacking in this book.
Even so, it's worth a go.