Courtier in the Royal House of Stuart this is an exciting historical novel from Leslie Hatton
It tells the story of an orphan boy called Toby Bennet who survives life in the back streets of the Black Friars area of London.
At the age of ten Toby saved the life of the Prince of Wales who was under attack from a maniac with a knife.
The Prince decides that he will reward Toby by bringing him into the royal household. The Prince arranges his education and promises the life of a courtier within the royal household. The House of Stuart.
But Oliver Cromwell has come to prominence and has wrought terrible destruction and caused terrible chaos the length and breadth of the kingdom.
When the king is taken prisoner and put on trial for treason, the prince must flee for his life, abandoning his country.
He spends the next twelve years exiled with his mother or his sister whom is Princess Mary of Orange either in Paris or Holland.
And all the while, loyal Toby is with him. There is romance for Toby, with a young lady's-in-waiting for Princess Mary
But there are several attempts to bring about the premature death of Toby and Toby learns that he is being pursued by a ruthless and secret adversary, someone who holds a dreadful secret and who wishes to see Toby dead.
But who is this person? And what is the secret that they hold?
It's a riproaring historical thriller from The Book Guild at £9.99.
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Saturday, 20 July 2019
The Madness Locker
The Madness Locker is a debut novel from the pen of E. J. Russell.
It's Christmas Day, 1986 and a corpse has been discovered in a wheelie bin in the Eastern suburbs of Sydney, Australia.
The remains are those of a widow who was 70 years of age.
The police swiftly go into action and launch a detailed and very intensive investigation, but despite their very best efforts, they fail to identify any potential suspects or a potential motive for the killing.
They find no clues, no forensic evidence and so reluctantly the police decide to file it as a cold case.
However, perhaps the police wee looking in the wrong places for clues to the murder?
E. J. Russell looks back to a time when, fifty years previously, the whole world had been in flames as innocent people were sent to places like Auschwitz merely because the Nazi Third Reich either did not like their political vies, their mental incapacity, their race or just because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time.
A young girl is arrested along with her family, they are forced to travel to Auschwitz on a three-day journey in a railway wagon. On arrival she is separated from her parents who she never sees again.
After years of suffering forced hard labour, near starvation and punishments "just because" the Russian army sweeps into Poland and she, along with the other pitiful survivors of Auschwitz are liberated.
After she recovers she believes that she knows who she blames for the loss of her parents and the years of abuse she suffered at the hands of her tormentors.
She sets out on a journey to track them down and to bring them to some form of justice.
Is there a link between her search for retributive justice and the corpse that was found in the wheelie bin?
If so, how did her nemesis track her down? And how and why did she have to die? How was she killed?
The beginning of this fictionalised account is a real event that took place in 2006 when a corpse was discovered in similar circumstances to those described in this novel.
It's a compelling and exciting thriller and worth every penny of the £9.99 price set by the publisher, Matador.
It will make a very good beach companion for the holidaymaking reader.
It's Christmas Day, 1986 and a corpse has been discovered in a wheelie bin in the Eastern suburbs of Sydney, Australia.
The remains are those of a widow who was 70 years of age.
The police swiftly go into action and launch a detailed and very intensive investigation, but despite their very best efforts, they fail to identify any potential suspects or a potential motive for the killing.
They find no clues, no forensic evidence and so reluctantly the police decide to file it as a cold case.
However, perhaps the police wee looking in the wrong places for clues to the murder?
E. J. Russell looks back to a time when, fifty years previously, the whole world had been in flames as innocent people were sent to places like Auschwitz merely because the Nazi Third Reich either did not like their political vies, their mental incapacity, their race or just because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time.
A young girl is arrested along with her family, they are forced to travel to Auschwitz on a three-day journey in a railway wagon. On arrival she is separated from her parents who she never sees again.
After years of suffering forced hard labour, near starvation and punishments "just because" the Russian army sweeps into Poland and she, along with the other pitiful survivors of Auschwitz are liberated.
After she recovers she believes that she knows who she blames for the loss of her parents and the years of abuse she suffered at the hands of her tormentors.
She sets out on a journey to track them down and to bring them to some form of justice.
Is there a link between her search for retributive justice and the corpse that was found in the wheelie bin?
If so, how did her nemesis track her down? And how and why did she have to die? How was she killed?
The beginning of this fictionalised account is a real event that took place in 2006 when a corpse was discovered in similar circumstances to those described in this novel.
It's a compelling and exciting thriller and worth every penny of the £9.99 price set by the publisher, Matador.
It will make a very good beach companion for the holidaymaking reader.
Memories of Now
Memories of Now is set in the wintertime.
Seven old university friends have gathered together in a country hotel in Scotland.
They dine, they drink, they take walks. They reminisce.
They find themselves facing up to a number of issues from their shared and not shared pasts, they debate, they argue and they bicker as only old friends can who share a history of 35 years of lives lived.
Lives lived well and perhaps not quite so well as intended or hoped for.
As the snow falls on the Scottish countryside some of the friends learn truths that they would rather have not known.
Seven old university friends have gathered together in a country hotel in Scotland.
They dine, they drink, they take walks. They reminisce.
They find themselves facing up to a number of issues from their shared and not shared pasts, they debate, they argue and they bicker as only old friends can who share a history of 35 years of lives lived.
Lives lived well and perhaps not quite so well as intended or hoped for.
As the snow falls on the Scottish countryside some of the friends learn truths that they would rather have not known.
They learn with considerable pain that things they thought they had always known as great truths were, all long, really nothing more than, at worst, great lies, or, at the very best, false assumptions or merely misunderstandings. And that what once tasted good now tasted sour.
Tajalli Keshavarz has written a very important book that is melancholic and which shines a strong beam of sunlight into the lives of seven old friends and lovers. And, after all, don't they say that sunlight is the best disinfectant?
It's published by Matador at £10.00 and will be available from 28th July.
Waves Aligning
Waves Aligning is a debut novel from African author Adaora O.
Having grown up in Nigeria Adaora O. brings to her readers a compelling and captivating novel that reveals what it is like to be a female growing up in a repressive environment in modern day Africa, which perhaps is not quite as modern as one might suppose.
The protagonist, Chinny, learns as she grows up that life doesn't just give you what you want or what you deserve. Especially if you are living in Eastern Nigeria and you are a female.
Her parents are hard working, yet not by any means describable as wealthy. They must make a choice. Who will they spend their meagre financial resources on educating in school? Chinny or her brother? Her brother who is entirely indifferent about the opportunities that education would provide. Yet Chinny was enthusiastic about education, so the inevitable decision to fund the education of her brother was even harder on Chinny.
But she has the friendship of Ejiofor to help her make it through her life as she meets with betrayal, poor health and tragedies and the looming spectre of a marriage she doesn't welcome and doesn't even want.
It seems that her life is a series of waves, constantly washing away her ambitions and dreams. Yet what might happen should the waves align? Will Chinny attain her dream of being able to sleep for as long as she wants?
This book is compelling, well-written and is a remarkable debut novel from an author I want to see more from.
It's published by Matador at £10.49 and should be in the suitcase of people who want an intelligent read to accompany them on their holidays.
Having grown up in Nigeria Adaora O. brings to her readers a compelling and captivating novel that reveals what it is like to be a female growing up in a repressive environment in modern day Africa, which perhaps is not quite as modern as one might suppose.
The protagonist, Chinny, learns as she grows up that life doesn't just give you what you want or what you deserve. Especially if you are living in Eastern Nigeria and you are a female.
Her parents are hard working, yet not by any means describable as wealthy. They must make a choice. Who will they spend their meagre financial resources on educating in school? Chinny or her brother? Her brother who is entirely indifferent about the opportunities that education would provide. Yet Chinny was enthusiastic about education, so the inevitable decision to fund the education of her brother was even harder on Chinny.
But she has the friendship of Ejiofor to help her make it through her life as she meets with betrayal, poor health and tragedies and the looming spectre of a marriage she doesn't welcome and doesn't even want.
It seems that her life is a series of waves, constantly washing away her ambitions and dreams. Yet what might happen should the waves align? Will Chinny attain her dream of being able to sleep for as long as she wants?
This book is compelling, well-written and is a remarkable debut novel from an author I want to see more from.
It's published by Matador at £10.49 and should be in the suitcase of people who want an intelligent read to accompany them on their holidays.
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