#Review By Lou of Thriller – Geneva By Richard Armitage @RCArmitage @FaberBooks #Geneva #PsychologicalThriller #Thriller

Geneva
By Richard Armitage

Review written by Louise Cannon (Lou)

Rating: 5 out of 5.

I bought the psychological thriller, Geneva at the crime book festival at Bloody Scotland in September. I wasn’t totally planning on, but after I heard Richard Armitage talk, I just knew I had to read it. He is better known as an actor, but what a debut! It is far better than expected… He talked about the number of drafts he wrote and has made clear no ghost-writers were used. He likes to write and sees it as a continuing career. You can find out more here about the Bloody Scotland event. It’ll come up in a separate tab so you can navigate easily back to this post. What was talked about at Bloody Scotland here: https://bookmarksandstages.home.blog/2024/09/17/review-by-lou-of-richard-armitage-chaired-by-brian-burnett-rcarmitage-bryanb1965-bloodyscotland-bloodyscotland/
I could see why it was picked by Richard and Judy for their book club read and won awards. Find out in my review below why I think this thriller was better than I thought it was going to be. First onto the blurb…

Geneva

Blurb

When you have it all
Sarah Collier has been lucky: she’s got a glittering scientific career and a husband who loves her more than anything.
And you start to lose it
But now she’s showing signs of early Alzheimer’s, and the only hope for a cure is in a controversial new technology being unveiled in Switzerland.
You’d go anywhere for help
In Geneva, as events turn dangerous and her memory loss worsens, Sarah has to decide who to trust: the people around her – or, despite her symptoms, herself.

Review

If you read Geneva, remember to breath. It’s all too easy to hold your breath.
It’s a scary thought, to be trapped. To be stuck in ones mind, starting to lose your place. Sarah has been diagnosed with early Alzheimer’s. As a reader, you enter her state of mind. The book draws you into her world. You see how life had been flourishing for her. She had it all, the career and the husband.

From the outset though things are quite sad with her dad’s health that she has to deal with. She ends up with a lot on her plate, including that later on she too has her own health to handle, which you can see deteriorate. This book really pulls on your heartstrings. As she deteriorates and desperately tries to seek out the new technology in Geneva that she’d heard could significantly help her, everything hangs in the balance. 

The screw tightens and the emotions heighten. Armitage places readers right in the centre of her world in this page-turner and makes you think about your own life. He gives enough time to allow the story to breath as poignancy increases as the characters naturally develop. In the midst of seeking out treatment, she and nor does the reader, know who can actually be trusted as things become darkly sinister at the facility.

As well as health, Richard Armitage also looks at the rise and rise of fake information being passed around. He cleverly intertwines this important subject into the story, so it avoids the hazard of taking you out of the story.

Geneva is a well-accomplished debut that is hard to put down until it is finished. You can feel everything, all the emotions and visualise it all as the characters and events jump from the page. 

Geneva is so good that I can see Richard Armitage writing more books and making a career out of it. I’d certainly be interested in reading a second book.
The Cut is available to pre-order.

#Review of Santa Steals Christmas By Eve Nairn-Magnante Illustrated By Nicholas Child @SantaStealsXms #SantaStealsChristmas #Christmas #InclusiveStories #ChildrensBooks #DyslexiaFriendly #Kidslit

Santa Steals Christmas
By Eve Nairn -Magnante
Illustrated By Nicholas Child

Review written by Louise Cannon (Lou)

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Santa Steals Christmas is written by a child for children. It is a book that’s also created for supporting charities. 5% of sales of each book will be donated to Scottish Autism via Work for Good, 5% of sales of each book will be donated to Dyslexia Scotland via Work For Good.
The book has a font and typeface designed by a dyslexic for people who have dyslexia.
Suitable for 3 years plus, it is the world’s 1st children’s picture book to be fully accessible! Available in dyslexia friendly book, ebook, audiobook, audio description, videobook, BSL & braille.

Version 1.0.0

Blurb

This Christmas isn’t like every other Christmas…

This year, Santa can be spotted stealing presents instead of sharing them – but how can this be?!

Can Rudolph and the elves save Christmas before all the girls and boys wake up?

A witty and surprising mystery, inspired and written by a child for children.

Review

Santa Steals Christmas has big bold pictures and distinctive font, with short, snappy sentences. It all begins in Santa’s workshop, where many toys can be seen. Toys are all delivered, but an alarm rings out to alert the real Santa that there is an imposter. The race is on to find the “naughty Santa”. What is discovered is quite a good twist and of course the real Santa saves the day that will leave children with festive cheer.

Santa Steals Christmas has all the entertaining fun with just the right amount of trepidation young children need, with a great ending that makes everything all right in the world again. It’s a fast read and races along at a good pace so that it can capture young children’s concentration levels. The illustrations make it fun and are bright and bold, helping children follow the story.

The accessibility for all children has been carefully considered through the type-face, font, margins, spacing ensuring that even those with dyslexia can have some festive fun with it.

I read it to a couple of groups of children who were delighted by this book. Their parents also approved of this book and all that it brings for every single child.
I also recommend this delightful and inclusive book.

#Review By Lou of the delightful Paddington and the Christmas Surprise By Michael Bond Illustrated by R.W. Alley @HarperCollinsUK #Paddington #Christmas #ChildrensBooks #PictureBooks

Paddington and the Christmas Surprise
By Michael Bond
Illustrated By R.W. Alley

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Paddington Bear never really gets old. Paddington and the Christmas Surprise makes a beautiful present or a pre-Christmas cosy reading time. It’s suitable for 4  years plus. The gold cover makes it especially special for children and adults alike to create cosy memories of story-times together. Discover my review after the blurb and fun cover.

Paddington and the Christmas Surprise

Blurb

A funny, festive picture book about Paddington, the beloved, classic bear from darkest Peru.

When the Browns take Paddington to the Christmas grotto at the local department store, their journey through the Winter Wonderland is full of unexpected surprises. But the best surprise is a present from Santa. After all, who else would find the perfect present for a bear like Paddington?

Join Paddington on his festive adventure as he discovers why Santa Claus makes everyone’s Christmas so special.

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Review

Enter the department store, Barkridges where Paddington Bear is with the Brown’s who are taking him to Santa’s grotto. The biggest questions for a curious bear is, does Paddington have marmalade? Will he reach the end of the Winter Wonderland tour? What will Santa do?

The illustrations are fabulous and there’s lots for children to look at and find as the story is being read. It’s a real treasure trove and feast for the eyes. The story is sweet and festive, with well-timed and paced trepidation as Paddington can’t be found by the Brown’s who are keen for him to see the end of the tour.

I highly recommend Paddington Bear books It’s a great time to try out the books or continue your Paddington journey as there’s a new film and Paddington Bear statues popping up across the UK.

 

#Review of Run For Your Lies By A.A. Abbott @AAAbbottStories @RandomTTours #RunForYourLies #BlogTour #PsychologicalThriller #Thriller

Run For Your Lies
By A.A. Abbott

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Run For Your Lies as you run through your psychological thriller. Discover the blurb below and my review below.

RUN FOR YOUR LIES EBOOK COVER

Blurb

You can run from your mistakes. But when they chase after you, will the hunt turn deadly?

Juliet Price struggles with guilt and regret. Her perfect life shattered by a fatal error in her twenties, the middle-aged ex-teacher is broke and friendless. Hiding in a crumbling flat in her home town, she’s shocked when the child killer who wrecked her future is freed from jail.

As a cold-blooded stalker closes in, Juliet desperately scrabbles for cash to go on the run. Can she escape before a twisted murderer takes his revenge?

If you like flawed protagonists scarred by the past, razor-edge races against time and a heartwarming chance at redemption, you’ll love this suspense-packed psychological thriller.

Join Juliet’s flight from darkness, and read ‘Run For Your Lies’ today!

Review

Short, sharp chapters make you run through 1992 and 2023 as the chapters alternate between the two different years. What happened in 1992 correlates with what’s happening in more present times and everything is catching up with the web of lies.

Juliet, Brooklyn, and Vix tell the twisty story of what happened and how the web of deception grew increasingly tangled. There’s a twisted killer about to be freed and is on the hunt for Juliet, messing with her mind in his stalker behaviour ways.

One minute you can have it all and the next its destroyed. The suspense and pace builds fast and hooks you in just as quickly. It’s very cleverly written and paced like that.

There is a time for redemption, but you’ll have to read it to find out how that works out.

Run for your lies BT Poster

#Review By Lou of Virtually Christmas – It’s time to save Santa! By David Baddiel @Baddiel @HarperCollinsCh #ChildrensBook #Christmas #MiddleGrade

Virtually Christmas
It’s Time To Save Santa

By David Baddiel

Review written by Louise Cannon

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Virtually Christmas by David Baddiel

Virtually Christmas is a smart read for 8 years plus as it recaptures festive spirit for the sceptical and has laughs for those who like to be humoured.
Check out the blurb and my review below.

Virtually Christmas

Blurb

The HILARIOUS new novel and the year’s most perfect festive gift – from million-copy bestselling author David Baddiel

It used to be the most WONDERFUL time of the year, but for years Christmas has been taken over by Winterzone.

All the things that made Christmas special are gone: the human connection, the baubles passed down through generations, even the rubbish cracker jokes.

Instead, Christmas is run by robots, while 3D holograms of Santa Claus called Santavatars check if you’ve been naughty or nice – and on Christmas Eve, all of the presents are delivered by ZoneDrones instead of Santa’s reindeer!

But when they stumble on a curious clue, eleven-year-old Etta and her friend Monty find themselves thrown into a fight to bring back Christmas. Racing against time and against the might of Winterzone, they must find the real Santa – before the true meaning of the festive season is lost forever . . .

Review

Meet 11 year old, Etta Baxter, her kitten, Weech and her 3 1/2 year old brother, Jonas. They end up on a quest to find Santa and one of the meanings of Christmas. It’s a race against time before the magic of the season is lost forever.

There are fantastic pictures throughout of Winter-Zone, they include a majestic towering castle that makes me think of Wicked and of course there is Santa and more… 

The book will appeal to those who are perhaps wondering about Christmas and Santa and at that cusp of the magic of it all changing, those who are into computer/internet games, adventure, humour as well as those who enjoy Christmas.

Virtually Christmas is a perfect Christmas read for 8 years plus, whether being read to or by themselves. It would be a brilliant bookish Christmas present. With illustrations and strong storyline, it has wide appeal. 

#Review of Getting Away With Murder, My Unexpected Life on Page, Stage and Screen, a memoir by Lynda La Plante @LaPlanteLynda #GettingAwayWithMurder #Memoir

Getting Away With Murder
My Unexpected Life on Page, Stage and Screen
By Lynda La Plante

Written By Louise Cannon

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Getting Away with Murder is what Lynda La Plante has been doing on page and screen for a fair bit of her life. Now, as a reader and viewer of the books, fan are in for a real treat and a real eye-opener to her varied career. I was incredibly fortunate to have been on a Zoom call with her earlier in the year with a small group of people. It was fascinating what she had to say. I am so pleased to share the book that followed.

Getting Away With Murder

Blurb

Screamingly funny and deliciously candid, full of wisdom and joie de vivre, this is memoir with the grip of a thriller‘ ERIN KELLY

Lynda La Plante has lived an illustrious life and has the stories to prove it.

From her early days in Liverpool to her unexpected acceptance into RADA, joining peers Anthony Hopkins, John Hurt and Ian McShane; from beginning her scriptwriting career with Widows and Prime Suspect and becoming a BAFTA award-winning writer and producer, Lynda’s tales of stage and screen will have you gasping in shock as well as laughing in the aisles.

Lynda has an important story to tell, one of breaking down stereotypes and blazing a trail for others along the way. Starting her writing career in the eighties, an era of entrenched gender inequality both in front of and behind the camera, Lynda faced innumerable obstacles to her vision.

Getting Away with Murder shows how she overcame them to create generation-defining television and become a multi-million-copy Sunday Times bestselling author. Still at the very top of her game, Lynda shares her story on her own terms, in a way that’s guaranteed to make you laugh, cry and be inspired to live a life without limits.

Review

Lynda La Plante, a household name from Liverpool with her creation of Widows, Prime Suspect and most recently, the Tennison series. She was and still is seen as a trail-blazer for women. She, like the characters she created is a strong woman who has been in positions to break down stereotypes. She hasn’t always had things easy, it was the 1980’s and women and girls had many more inequalities than they do today to overcome…
Oh the people she’s met though and the stories she can tell, which are fascinating to read. She has been fortunate to work with some of the greats, spanning a hugely long career that isn’t over yet…
That’s part of the more glitzy part of her life, if you like. It all sounds such a dream, but really she’s had much to conquer and lived through a lot. People haven’t always made easy pathways, other people don’t always and she’s had her relationship problems and go through divorce. Despite the adversities, she has overcome them to win top awards. She doesn’t sugar-coat things though and I think that’s a good thing.

There’s much to discover as not everyone knows much more than what they’ve seen on tv and in her biggest sellers in books. It’s an absolutely compelling read and you can even see and feel what she’s talking about in-between the lines. That takes real skill to write like that. 

There’s humour, warmth, emotion and just fascinating information to be garnered from reading this. Ultimately what she says makes you admire her even more.
Even now, she is doing things on her own terms, such as telling her life story with what she wants to write. It’s quite remarkable in still, a world where people want to tell you what to do and how to do it. She had found routes to do it her way and that’s inspiring.

It’s stocked in many good bookshops in paperback, hardback, signed editions and in libraries.

Bookshop.org                   Waterstones              WH Smith

*please note I’m not affiliated to any bookshop.