The Importance of Being Maddison is a new novel from Helen E. Highton.
It's a very amusing novel which takes a wry look at the life of a typical family, through the lens of a girl of seven!
It looks at the McLaren family and how Maddison fits in to the life of the family.
Maddie is a little pocket rocket who seems to have not been fitted with an off switch!
There's her mother, Liz, who seems to be going from one Maddie inspired disaster to another (she always seems to be apologising for what Maddie has done, or trying to explain it.
Then there is Joe, her Dad, who seems unable to suffer fools gladly, or perhaps at all.
There's her sister, Rachel who looks at her little sister with a mixture of shock, amusement and perhaps a hint of jealousy.
And what about brother Robbie, going through the traumas of being a teenage boy, who is frustrated and exasperated by his little sister and her antics.
This book will resonate with everyone who had a little sister like Maddie, and make everyone else who didn't have a little sister like Maddie very, very grateful for that fact!
It's published by Matador at £8.99.
Translate
Friday, 21 September 2018
Wednesday, 19 September 2018
Lizzie's' Dream
Lizzie's' Dream is a romantic novel set against the backdrops of the horrors of the Great War.
Lizzie is 15 and she knows what she wants to be. She wants to be a governess.
However, the fact that she, along with the rest of her working class family, work in the local mill, this dream job looks to be more of a piper dream than something she can attain.
However, She meets a young solider called Harry who is stationed locally, but as their romance seems to be blossoming, Harry is sent away as part of the war.
Whilst she is trying to forget about Harry, she becomes a companion to Molly, who is the daughter of the family that owns the mill, for Molly is a sickly girl and is too ill to attend school.
As well as being her companion, the two girls swiftly develop a genuine friendship and Lizzie is able to teach Molly everything she knows.
Could this mean that Lizzie's dream might have a chance of becoming a reality?
But then she receives a letter form Harry, who has been injured and is now recuperating in a military hospital.
What happens next?
This is a charming and somewhat bitter-sweet romantic novel and it is the debut novel of poet Beverley J. Tucker.
It is published by Matador at £7.99.
Lizzie is 15 and she knows what she wants to be. She wants to be a governess.
However, the fact that she, along with the rest of her working class family, work in the local mill, this dream job looks to be more of a piper dream than something she can attain.
However, She meets a young solider called Harry who is stationed locally, but as their romance seems to be blossoming, Harry is sent away as part of the war.
Whilst she is trying to forget about Harry, she becomes a companion to Molly, who is the daughter of the family that owns the mill, for Molly is a sickly girl and is too ill to attend school.
As well as being her companion, the two girls swiftly develop a genuine friendship and Lizzie is able to teach Molly everything she knows.
Could this mean that Lizzie's dream might have a chance of becoming a reality?
But then she receives a letter form Harry, who has been injured and is now recuperating in a military hospital.
What happens next?
This is a charming and somewhat bitter-sweet romantic novel and it is the debut novel of poet Beverley J. Tucker.
It is published by Matador at £7.99.
They Were There on the Western Front 1914-1918
They Were There on the Western Front 1914-1918 is a remarkable book from Alan Weeks.
He has painstakingly researched an absolutely amazing collection of first-hand accounts from 100 people who were there on the Western Front.
The 100 are made up of a wide variety of different nationalities, British, Americans, Australians and French, from all walks of life, officers, conscripts, regular soldiers, engineers, medical staff and more besides.
It is profusely illustrated with photographs, drawings and maps which help to support the diary writings of these 100 people, including Alan's own father.
It explores topics such as why would someone want to keep a diary in the hell that was the Western Front?
There's also extracts from the diaries of Harry Patch, who died at 111, the last veteran of trenches of World War 1.
Not only are there diaries, but also extracts of letters that were sent back home.
This is a very moving and thought-provoking work and it is one that the serious student of the First World War will want on his or her bookshelf.
It is published by The Book Guild at £11.99.
He has painstakingly researched an absolutely amazing collection of first-hand accounts from 100 people who were there on the Western Front.
The 100 are made up of a wide variety of different nationalities, British, Americans, Australians and French, from all walks of life, officers, conscripts, regular soldiers, engineers, medical staff and more besides.
It is profusely illustrated with photographs, drawings and maps which help to support the diary writings of these 100 people, including Alan's own father.
It explores topics such as why would someone want to keep a diary in the hell that was the Western Front?
There's also extracts from the diaries of Harry Patch, who died at 111, the last veteran of trenches of World War 1.
Not only are there diaries, but also extracts of letters that were sent back home.
This is a very moving and thought-provoking work and it is one that the serious student of the First World War will want on his or her bookshelf.
It is published by The Book Guild at £11.99.
Friday, 14 September 2018
Yoi
Yoi is an important book, for it is the first published biography about Edith Cornelia Crosse, who was a most remarkable woman.
Widely known as Yoi, Edith was born in Hungary to a British father and a Hungarian/Polish mother.
Eventually Yoi moved to England where she lived with her grandmother.
She settled down to life as a married woman and a mother. But her life was to be changed dramatically when a major scandal blew up and changed her life for ever, when she ran away with a young lover.
Yoi had a love of travel and she roamed far and wide, visiting Tehran and Italy, where she lived with her second husband, a sculptor of some repute called Antonio Maraini.
Yoi began to find success as a writer, publishing several books of her travels, books which met with some success.
She also published a variety of articles in newspapers and magazines in Britain, including an interview with Mussolini.
Yoi was an interesting woman, cultured and refined yet not averse to stirring things up a little, if she felt so inclined.
The book is well researched and profusely illustrated and does bring to life Yoi.
The book is published by Matador at £17.99.
Widely known as Yoi, Edith was born in Hungary to a British father and a Hungarian/Polish mother.
Eventually Yoi moved to England where she lived with her grandmother.
She settled down to life as a married woman and a mother. But her life was to be changed dramatically when a major scandal blew up and changed her life for ever, when she ran away with a young lover.
Yoi had a love of travel and she roamed far and wide, visiting Tehran and Italy, where she lived with her second husband, a sculptor of some repute called Antonio Maraini.
Yoi began to find success as a writer, publishing several books of her travels, books which met with some success.
She also published a variety of articles in newspapers and magazines in Britain, including an interview with Mussolini.
Yoi was an interesting woman, cultured and refined yet not averse to stirring things up a little, if she felt so inclined.
The book is well researched and profusely illustrated and does bring to life Yoi.
The book is published by Matador at £17.99.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)



