#Review By Lou of This Motherless Land By Nikki May @NikkiOMay @DoubledayUK @alisonbarrow #ThisMotherlessLand a Retelling of #MansfieldPark

This Motherless Land
By Nikki May

Rating: 5 out of 5.

I like Mansfield Park by Jane Austen, although isn’t my favourite of hers, that would be Sense and Sensibility and Persuasion, on near enough equal footing, but it’s good enough. ‘This Motherless Land’ interested me nonetheless after giving Wahala a high star rating and it didn’t disappoint. Thanks to Nikki May, I was gifted a copy of the book, a nice bookmark and a dip-dab, which I hadn’t had one of since I was a child. I can confirm it tasted how I remembered it and I enjoyed the fun that brought. Now, onto the serious stuff of the blurb and my review of the book.

This Motherless Land

Blurb

From the prize-winning author of WAHALA, a powerful de-colonial retelling of MANSFIELD PARK, exploring identity, culture, race and love.

When Funke’s mother dies in an accident in Lagos, she’s sent to live with her maternal family in England. Against a backdrop of condescension and mild neglect, sensible Funke strives to fit in, determined to become one of them.

Free-spirited Liv has always wanted to break free of her joyless family, to be nothing like them. Fiercely protective of Funke, she at last has an ally. The two cousins give each other what they need most: love.

But the past casts long shadows and the choices made by their mothers haunt them, shaping the trajectory of their adult lives. Can they escape their legacy?

Witty, warm, hugely entertainingThis Motherless Land bridges three decades and two continents, delving into the thorny territories of race and culture and belonging. At its heart is a story about love and how it can make the difference between surviving and thriving.

Review

Some re-tellings of stories work and some absolutely do not. This one actually does work and also in some ways, nicely sits alone too. It doesn’t matter whether you’ve read Mansfield Park (although I recommend you give it a go if not and this does have a flavour of Mansfield Park throughout) or not. I feel you can read it as it is, or with that particular story by Austen in mind, either would work, so don’t let that put you off.

Set in 1978 and goes onto 1986 and 1992, you can follow the lives of Funke and Liv in alternating chapters in what becomes a very compelling read. Each part starts with a fun reference to pop culture of the time. Funke’s mother is British and her dad is Nigerian and all should’ve been well, except tragedy strikes and her mum and brother die. I must say that I like that there’s a part that just calls death what it is and states that someone died, not lost, but actually died. There’s something refreshing about it.

Reading about Liv is lively and she has some issues and isn’t always happy in her life, so brings its own emotions carried along with it. She’s a fascinating character in that she’s looking for a different life from that of her family’s.

It’s an interesting coming of age story that weaves through, things that have a tinge of sadness, trying to find your place in the world, the friendships and relationships cultivated and betrayals that occur. There are also scenes like eaves-dropping on conversations, even when you don’t quite know what it all means, that adds an air of familiarity, dare I say, and also some humour. Humour filters throughout this book in some of how things like certain tv programmes have always been viewed at certain ages and stages in life and so much more. Many aspects of growing up, pop culture and more are colourfully captured in this book.

The book takes readers to Liv and Funke into when they’re entering adulthood and it’s a satisfying feeling that you’ve seen them through the formative years of their lives. They’re characters that are easy to embrace throughout, even when there’s a bit of going off the rails, but by that time, the investment is there and you need to know how it all ends and whether they can survive and also enter the lives they dream of.

As well as the entertaining side of life, the more challenging side of life is well-captured too, through skilful plotting and writing, making it feel complete.

The writing is strong and paints a picture of Nigeria through the years and in some cases, its place in the world on a global stage such as certain events.

It’s a vibrant read that you can just pick up on a summer’s day and just take some time to relax and read and read… All in all, I highly recommend it.

#Review By Lou of The Violin and the Candlestick By David Jarvis @David_Jarvis_ @HobeckBooks #Thriller #MikeKingdomThrillerSeries

The Violin and the Candlestick
By David Jarvis

Rating: 5 out of 5.

It’s time to get excited about the third book in the ‘Mike Kingdom’ thriller series, which can be read as a stand-alone or part of the series. Now David Jarvis has joined the Hobeck family of authors, you can find all his books on the Hobeck Books website and all your usual places to buy/borrow books from. Today I am on the Hobeck Books blog tour with its rather atmospheric, arty cover, the blurb and my review.

The Violin and Candlestick

Blurb

A businessman flies by private jet for a half-hour lunch in Doha, Qatar. This would have been no big deal except that he is the CIA’s main asset in the Middle East and, six hours later, is found dead in his villa.

Michaela ‘Mike’ Kingdom was meant to be investigating something else for Leonard de Vries, her old CIA and Five Eyes boss, when he asked her to help him find the killers. She had been one of his analysts in London before the ‘accident’ that had killed her husband and damaged her leg.

She told everyone many times that she didn’t do fieldwork, but no one listened, not even Mike herself. Leonard told her not to worry as he had organised help in the form of another ex-CIA agent, now a Paralympian in the US basketball team.

Review

Another cracking book by David Jarvis and a great addition to the ‘Mike Kingdom’ thriller series. There’s a lot of foul play in this third book, which can incidentally be read as a stand-alone or as a starting point and then go back to the others.

Leonard De Vries, Mike’s former boss, reckons there’s a ‘mole’ about and also reckons he may be suspended at ‘Five Eyes’. There’s a mystery to be solved there and she needs to talk to Habib Murchison, except this key person is found mysteriously dead just at the point where he had something to say…

It’s another gripping book with the darkness of intense, well-plotted thriller, lightened with some well-placed and well-formed humour. The setting is vivid by the skill of Jarvis’s writing so you can see what’s meant to be seen and where, through the descriptive words. It’s quite arty in that sense. The title made me remember that in 1910 there was a painting called ‘Violin and Candlestick’ created by cubist artist, Georges Braque. In a way, the writing, much like the painting, pops out off the page in a way that is easy to visualise, adding texture and colour to the point where you can almost feel the heat of Doha.

Here’s a link to Hobeck Books website: www.hobeck.net

David Jarvis Violin (6)

#Review By Lou of The Runner By Lloyd Devereux #LloydDevereux @HQstories #TheRunner #Thriller

The Runner
By Lloyd Devereux

Rating: 4.5 out of 5.

Explosive and gripping is what Lloyd Devereux brings in this thriller. Thanks to HQ stories for the copy for review. Find out more in the blurb and my review below this brilliant cover.

The Runner

Blurb

A gripping thriller from Lloyd Devereux Richards author of TikTok sensation, Stone Maidens.

He’s in too deep… And almost out of time.

Martin Gabriel is a runner for Ben. He runs errands. He runs deliveries. And now he is running for his life…

When a deal goes wrong, Martin realizes Ben isn’t the legitimate businessman he thought he was.

He flees before Ben catches up with him, unaware that Ben’s criminal network and the FBI are also on his tail.

No longer a runner, but still on the run.

Is Martin fast enough to get away from his past?

Review

The clocks ticking. Time is running out. The FBI are on a mission to catch up with a criminal network. Martin is a runner and the legitimate businessman he thought Ben was, isn’t quite what he first seemed. It’s life-changing for Martin, but not in the most positive way.

The Runner is fast-paced thriller on the whole, but does differ when readers are introduced to certain characters, but doesn’t lose any of the suspense that builds up throughout the book. It’s an intriguing read that captivates and intrigues. 

#Interview By Lou with Darrell Martin – Time To Celebrate Just The Tonic Comedy Club 20 Years At The Edinburgh Fringe Festival and the comedy club’s founder @Justthetonic @EdFringe #UnleashYourFringe #EdFringe2024 #Comedy #Theatre @aDarrellMartin

JUST THE TONIC
20 YEARS AT EDINBURGH FRINGE
Written by Angela Allen, celebrated with Lou at Bookmarks and Stages
Just The Tonic Logo 
This year marks the 30th anniversary of Just the Tonic and 20 years of Just the Tonic at Edinburgh Fringe.
 
Based in Edinburgh, the company has grown from humble beginnings as a Sunday night club into one of the largest comedy producers in the UK, with a huge presence at the Fringe spread over 5 venues.
 At a time when the Fringe is becoming more and more expensive for both performers and the public, Just the Tonic boasts one of the most affordable programmes of the festival.
Just the Tonic HeadlinersAs well as low ticket prices and a Pay What You Want model, there are shows such as the Big Value Comedy ShowHeadliners for £10, Comedy in the Dark, Best of Cabaret and All Stars Burlesque where you can see several performers and big names on the same bill.

Just the Tonic
 has a reputation for supporting new talent and has helped launch the careers of many comedians including Romesh Ranganathan, Johnny Vegas, Jason Manford, Josie Long, Gary Delaney, Sarah Millican, Jon Richardson, Rob Beckett, Sean Walsh.
This year you could discover the next comedian to make it big, catch a theatreJust The Tonic Brunch production making its debut in the UK, or enjoy a magical family show.
The 2024 programme is packed with almost 200 shows from comedy and cabaret to theatre and kids events.

Lucy Porter
Lucy Porter

Highlights include comedians Andrew       MaxwellKai Humphies, Lucy PorterCraig     HillClinton Baptist, Alfie Brown and Scottish favourite Connor   Burns.  US comedy stars Chanel Ali, Titi Lee and Michael John    Ciszewski make their Fringe debuts and there’s fresh new

Jake Donaldson
Jake Donaldson

comedy  from the UK including Jake Donaldson –  ‘a must see’  (Huffington Post) – and Dave Durkom – ‘a young sketch comedian   to watch’ (Telegraph).

 
Theatre includes The Heaven’s Favorite Murderess, an adaptation of the Greek story of Medea, Jewels, a subversive spectacle of indestructible womanhood, and groundbreaking productions from Edinburgh’s own Theatre Paradok. 
 
Just the Tonic Pure Imagination
Family-friendly shows Pure Imagination:  A Willy Wonka Parody and 6 Impossible Things: A Comedy Magic Show based on Alice in Wonderland, will delight all ages and there’s robots, escape rooms and mysteries to solve.
Founder Darrell Martin says:  “Not one of the ‘big boys’, we are proud to remain in keeping with the spirit of the fringe. Not one of the smaller venues, we also pride ourselves at hosting some of the best new comedy you will find. With 30 years of running comedy clubs and 20 years of producing Edfringe shows, we are proud to be part of this amazing festival.”
 

For all the shows currently on sale and to get tickets visit:  https://edinburgh.justthetonic.com

Instagram and Facebook: @jttedinburgh

Tik Tok:  @justthetoniccomedy

#Review By Lou of Felix’s Favourite Day By Fiona Lowry @FionaLowry9 #PictureBook for 3-5 years #ChildrensBook #KidsLit @RandomTTours #FelixsFavouriteDay

Felix’s Favourite Day
By Fiona Lowry

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Today I am part of starting off the Random T. Tours blog tour with a review of a lovely award winning picture book for 3-5 year olds. Discover the cover, blurb and review below.

Felix Full Cover

Blurb

A fun and colourful picture book of positive thinking to show that your dreams come true.
Perfect growth mindset book for ages 3-5yrs


Winner of The Golden Wizard Book Award 2022.
Winner of American Writing Awards 2023 Children’s Book International, 


Felix loves animals and dreams of being a vet when he is older. The only problem is, he doesn’t have his own pet to look after yet.
After begging, badgering and bothering his parents, Felix is finally taken to the local animal shelter for what his parents hope will be a sensibly chosen cat or dog…Felix may have other ideas!

Review

Felix very dearly wants a pet and has ambitions to become a vet when he grows up. Young readers are taken through his desires for a pet through a lovely rhyming story and brightly coloured, attractive pictures of the different animals he looks at and considers.

The book is playful and fun as well as easily accessible with its linkage of words to pictures and varying fonts. It’s an eye-catchingly attractive book that has a great storyline that is short enough to hold the attention for 3-5 year olds and has humour they’ll appreciate. It’s a book that is just easy to want to turn page after page until the end.

It’s great for a bedtime story or one if you’re considering a pet for the home and it’s also great for nursery settings too. Everyone can have fun with it, including the adults reading it aloud to children or children taking a peek on their own or with a friend.

Felix Blog Tour Poster

#Review By Lou of The Blind Devotion of Imogen By David Putnam @daveputnam #SwellMedia #TheBlindDevotionOfImogen #Mystery #CrimeFiction

The Blind Devotion of Imogen
By David Putnam

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Set in 1973, The Blind Devotion of Imogen has its quirks and murders to solve and a cover to match the times. Find out more in the blurb and my review below.

The Blind Devotion of Imogene

Blurb

In 1973, Imogene Taylor is seventy-five years old, on parole for murder, and works at a store that sells dented canned goods. Twelve years earlier, she went to prison for killing her love-of-her-life-husband, Wayne. She called it an accident. The judge and jury called it murder. Imogene’s parole agent is constantly on her case, looking to send her back to prison.

During her time in prison, Imogene had to vent her angst at someone and sent the sitting Presidents (during the ten years in prison) threatening letters bringing her to the attention of the Secret Service. She does extensive research and writes a novel, Peekaboo POTUS, about the assassination of a US President. She sends the book “over the transom” to one publisher. The publisher, after being unable to contact Imogene, comes looking for her.

The Cigar, an organized crime gangster, walks into Dentco, where Imogene works, and extorts the store for protection money. Pay up or get firebombed. The entire strip center is under this threat.

At the same time, Imogene’s neighbor dies of natural causes and leaves a hoarder’s mess to his daughter, Suzanne. Imogene helps Suz clear out a pyramid of boxes filled with junk in the garage. At the bottom of the pile, they find a box with a dead woman who has been hidden for many years.

Imogene must dodge an overzealous parole agent while dealing with a dead woman in the neighbor’s garage. She’s on parole for murder, so she can’t report it to the police. No one would believe her. Imogene and Suz think the woman in the box is Suz’s long-estranged mother. Rather than reveal Suz’s father as the probable killer, Imogene convinces Suz to bury her mom under the avocado tree in the backyard. Until Thelma, Suz’s mother, appears after reading the obituary.

It’s a race to uncover the real killer as Imogene dodges gangsters, family members, and a publisher on her quest to find the truth.

Review

Imogen Taylor at 75 years old is on parole and it’s taken from her point of view. It also makes for a rather different read. She’s quite productive when she’s in prison for murder. The book becomes quirky in that she then tries to solve a crime. She’s an interesting character to work out and sure doesn’t fit neatly into any of the usual type of boxes people fall into. There’s also an intriguing labelled box with writing you wouldn’t expect to see, which gives it a mysterious feel.
The atmosphere generated and the images through the writing that enter your mind, places you at the time and scene rather well.

It’s an entertaining and intriguing book with all its complexities and bits of humour wrapped up in a murder mystery.