Wrack is a novel by James Bradley.
It tells the story of David Norfolk who is an archaeologist who has the task of searching for the wreck of a Portuguese ship that is thought to have sunk 400 years ago off the coast of New South Wales, Australia.
If he were to find this ship it would lead to the complete rewriting of the history of the discovery of Australia.
But what happens is that instead of the prize he seeks, Norfolk discovers the remains of a man who had been murdered half a century earlier.
There is an elderly hermit who is living in a nearby shack. The man is dying and he seems to know something about the identity of the dead man. And tantalisingly points to a possible link between the corpse and the shipwreck that Norfolk is searching for.
The elderly man beings to reveal secrets from his own life, a life that was blighted by rivalry, passion abd betrayal.
But does he really know anything about the sunken ship and the story of the murder that took place all those years ago?
Will he reveal what he knows to Norfolk before it is too late?
This is a compelling and exciting story that is written by a master storyteller who is an excellent and highly skilled researcher.
The book will make an idea Christmas present for those who like adventure stories and is available through the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop, which is to be found to the righthand side of this review.
It is published in paperback by Faber and Faber at £7.99.
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Sunday, 6 December 2015
Unicorn Power A Princess who can't dance
It's the middle of the night. Eliza is sleeping. Yet her twin sister Darcy wakes her up. Why? Because a princess called Jemima is in trouble and needs their help!
All at once Eliza is awake and the twins are putting on their pretty pink wellington boots, saddle up their flying unicorn and dash off to the rescue!
The princess is in the expert help of Darcy and Eliza. She has been invited to attend a special ball, yet she doesn't know how to dance the waltz! Every time she has tried, she has fallen over.
Thankfully, the girls love to give dancing lessons at midnight and with the magical assistance of their unicorn called Blossom, they think they should be able to turn their princess friend into a spectacular, sparkling dancer.
And, after a few false starts, they soon have her dancing like a champion dancer.
This book, written by Andrea Miller, is not only charmingly written, it is also charmingly illustrated throughout.
It is an ideal Christmas present for little girls who like pink wellingtons, dancing, unicorns and helping princesses out.
It is published in hardback at £8.99 by The Book Guild and is available via the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop ,which you will find to the righthand side of this book review.
All at once Eliza is awake and the twins are putting on their pretty pink wellington boots, saddle up their flying unicorn and dash off to the rescue!
The princess is in the expert help of Darcy and Eliza. She has been invited to attend a special ball, yet she doesn't know how to dance the waltz! Every time she has tried, she has fallen over.
Thankfully, the girls love to give dancing lessons at midnight and with the magical assistance of their unicorn called Blossom, they think they should be able to turn their princess friend into a spectacular, sparkling dancer.
And, after a few false starts, they soon have her dancing like a champion dancer.
This book, written by Andrea Miller, is not only charmingly written, it is also charmingly illustrated throughout.
It is an ideal Christmas present for little girls who like pink wellingtons, dancing, unicorns and helping princesses out.
It is published in hardback at £8.99 by The Book Guild and is available via the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop ,which you will find to the righthand side of this book review.
My Hair Curls
My Hair Curls is a wonderful and charming book by Sheryl Richards and vibrantly illustrated by Noushka Galley.
It tells the story of Angeline who is an ordinary, but remarkably special, little girl of a third generation family of African-Caribbean heritage. She lives with her mum and dad and her little brother, George.
Angeline tells her own story in a charming way, using very simple, yet very powerful words to describe the differences and the similarities- of not only her hair, but the hair of her friends.
There are also 18 beautiful butterflies for you and your child to discover which are hidden -in full view!- throughout the book.
There are also interactive elements within the book which mean that the book will become highly personalised to the very lucky owner of this book.
This isn't one of those well-meaning yet potentially very annoying books that promote diversity in a tedious and dull way. This is a book that celebrates diversity in a bright, breezy and effective fashion.
Sheryl is not only a very talented writer, she is also a mother and her understanding of what children want and like is reflected in this "must buy" book which will make an ideal Christmas gift for any child (probably best for girls, though) no matter what their cultural identity.
It's ideal for reading together (remember to look out for the butterflies!) and costs £6.99 in paperback from Matador.
You can buy it through the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop, which you will find to the righthand side of this review.
It tells the story of Angeline who is an ordinary, but remarkably special, little girl of a third generation family of African-Caribbean heritage. She lives with her mum and dad and her little brother, George.
Angeline tells her own story in a charming way, using very simple, yet very powerful words to describe the differences and the similarities- of not only her hair, but the hair of her friends.
There are also 18 beautiful butterflies for you and your child to discover which are hidden -in full view!- throughout the book.
There are also interactive elements within the book which mean that the book will become highly personalised to the very lucky owner of this book.
This isn't one of those well-meaning yet potentially very annoying books that promote diversity in a tedious and dull way. This is a book that celebrates diversity in a bright, breezy and effective fashion.
Sheryl is not only a very talented writer, she is also a mother and her understanding of what children want and like is reflected in this "must buy" book which will make an ideal Christmas gift for any child (probably best for girls, though) no matter what their cultural identity.
It's ideal for reading together (remember to look out for the butterflies!) and costs £6.99 in paperback from Matador.
You can buy it through the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop, which you will find to the righthand side of this review.
Just a Little Scratch
Just a Little Scratch, subtitled "Anesthesia a straightforward guide to what it is" is a new book by Dr David Raitt.
The thought of a forthcoming operation can be unsettling, but now these concerns and fears can be allayed by this new and highly informative book by near-40 year veteran anaesthetist Dr Raitt.
Before the advent of anesthesia surgery was brutal and carried out as quickly as possible before the patient died of shock, due to the excruciating pain of having a broken bone set, an operation performed or a diseased limb cut off.
This was all changed, however, with the discovery and development of various types of anaesthesia.
Dr Raitt's guide to anaesthesia givers the reader a brief overview of the history and the development of the branch of medical science known as anaesthesia and modern, cutting edge techniques.
It takes the reader through how it works, what the anesthetist does during the operation, what the best anaesthetics are and much more, besides.
Dr Raitt had taken a look at the available books on anaesthesia and had realised that the available books on the subject were either all so filled with advanced medical jargon and terminology, or conversely, were so basic that thy were of very limited use.
Dr Raitt wanted to write a book that was suitable for everyone, but would be of special interest to patients and their families, before an operation was performed.
Dr Rait -who trained as an anesthetist whilst he was serving in the RAF- and who then spent near 30 years as a consultant anaesthetist in the city of Leicester, was fully aware of how daunting an operation could be, so wanted to provide a book that was as comforting as it was informative.
It is written in a very approachable style. Apparently this is the first informative guide that Dr Raitt has written. As this is the case it is to be hoped that this will be the first of many such books that he will write.
Before I picked up this book, I would have doubted that a book on anesthesia would have been enthralling, but this slim, but highly informative book, is enthralling and utterly engrossing.
Although Dr Raitt has intended this book to be for the layman it is my opinion that this book will make an ideal Christmas present for anyone who is either already a medical student, or is in pre-med classes at college or university.
It will also be of valuable assistance to nurses and healthcare assistants, hospital chaplains and other people who work with patients who are about to undergo an operation.
Hospitals really should consider buying this book by the case for staff and patients to read. It really is that good.
It's published by Matador at an incredibly modest £8.99 it is an ideal Christmas stocking filler for everyone from the first year medical student to someone about to undergo a surgical procedure.
You can buy it from the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop, you'll find it to the right hand side of this book review.
The thought of a forthcoming operation can be unsettling, but now these concerns and fears can be allayed by this new and highly informative book by near-40 year veteran anaesthetist Dr Raitt.
Before the advent of anesthesia surgery was brutal and carried out as quickly as possible before the patient died of shock, due to the excruciating pain of having a broken bone set, an operation performed or a diseased limb cut off.
This was all changed, however, with the discovery and development of various types of anaesthesia.
Dr Raitt's guide to anaesthesia givers the reader a brief overview of the history and the development of the branch of medical science known as anaesthesia and modern, cutting edge techniques.
It takes the reader through how it works, what the anesthetist does during the operation, what the best anaesthetics are and much more, besides.
Dr Raitt had taken a look at the available books on anaesthesia and had realised that the available books on the subject were either all so filled with advanced medical jargon and terminology, or conversely, were so basic that thy were of very limited use.
Dr Raitt wanted to write a book that was suitable for everyone, but would be of special interest to patients and their families, before an operation was performed.
Dr Rait -who trained as an anesthetist whilst he was serving in the RAF- and who then spent near 30 years as a consultant anaesthetist in the city of Leicester, was fully aware of how daunting an operation could be, so wanted to provide a book that was as comforting as it was informative.
It is written in a very approachable style. Apparently this is the first informative guide that Dr Raitt has written. As this is the case it is to be hoped that this will be the first of many such books that he will write.
Before I picked up this book, I would have doubted that a book on anesthesia would have been enthralling, but this slim, but highly informative book, is enthralling and utterly engrossing.
Although Dr Raitt has intended this book to be for the layman it is my opinion that this book will make an ideal Christmas present for anyone who is either already a medical student, or is in pre-med classes at college or university.
It will also be of valuable assistance to nurses and healthcare assistants, hospital chaplains and other people who work with patients who are about to undergo an operation.
Hospitals really should consider buying this book by the case for staff and patients to read. It really is that good.
It's published by Matador at an incredibly modest £8.99 it is an ideal Christmas stocking filler for everyone from the first year medical student to someone about to undergo a surgical procedure.
You can buy it from the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop, you'll find it to the right hand side of this book review.
Sunday, 29 November 2015
The Galician Parallax
The Galician Parallax is a new thriller by James G. Skinner.
Set in 2004, it touches on the three coordinated attacks on three commuter trains in rush hour Madrid that murdered almost 200 people, leaving a further 2,000 with physical and psychological scars.
A Jihadist group working in Madrid had taken two years to plan and then execute the attacks. The next planned attack would be in London.
At the beginning of the novel, a British yachtsman who lives in the Spanish city of Vigo kills himself.
Or did he? Because Segio Garcia, a youthful and inquisitive lieutenant in the Spanish Civil Guards does not believe in the suicide theory. For he suspects that the Briton's death may well have been down to a homicide.
In his own time he runs what is, virtually, an investigation that is running parallel to the official investigation that is being mounted by his colleagues.
As his own investigation proceeds he digs deeper into the case and is staggered to discover that there is a link between his private case and Al Qaeda.
The problem is, he realises that he cannot prove conclusively that the link actually exists.
He forms the conclusion that he cannot take the next step forward to prove his thesis on the link without the help and assistance of the British authorities. So he drafts in the assistance of Stan Bullock, who is the honorary British Consul.
Bullock is amenable to help and begins to bend the rules of the consular and Foreign Office rules in order to obtain the information that is required.
Their combined efforts do uncover a link to one of the top cocaine cartels operating within the United Kingdom, but ut is terrorists operatives that form a real and present danger to the lives of our two heroes.
Could they prevail against apparently insurmountable odds? Would they survive?
This is a pacy and exciting thriller and will make an ideal Christmas gift for the lover fo thriller novels.
It is published by Matador at £10.99 and is available via the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop, which is to be found at the righthand side of this book review.
Set in 2004, it touches on the three coordinated attacks on three commuter trains in rush hour Madrid that murdered almost 200 people, leaving a further 2,000 with physical and psychological scars.
A Jihadist group working in Madrid had taken two years to plan and then execute the attacks. The next planned attack would be in London.
At the beginning of the novel, a British yachtsman who lives in the Spanish city of Vigo kills himself.
Or did he? Because Segio Garcia, a youthful and inquisitive lieutenant in the Spanish Civil Guards does not believe in the suicide theory. For he suspects that the Briton's death may well have been down to a homicide.
In his own time he runs what is, virtually, an investigation that is running parallel to the official investigation that is being mounted by his colleagues.
As his own investigation proceeds he digs deeper into the case and is staggered to discover that there is a link between his private case and Al Qaeda.
The problem is, he realises that he cannot prove conclusively that the link actually exists.
He forms the conclusion that he cannot take the next step forward to prove his thesis on the link without the help and assistance of the British authorities. So he drafts in the assistance of Stan Bullock, who is the honorary British Consul.
Bullock is amenable to help and begins to bend the rules of the consular and Foreign Office rules in order to obtain the information that is required.
Their combined efforts do uncover a link to one of the top cocaine cartels operating within the United Kingdom, but ut is terrorists operatives that form a real and present danger to the lives of our two heroes.
Could they prevail against apparently insurmountable odds? Would they survive?
This is a pacy and exciting thriller and will make an ideal Christmas gift for the lover fo thriller novels.
It is published by Matador at £10.99 and is available via the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop, which is to be found at the righthand side of this book review.
"Oh! It's yerself!"
"Oh! It's yerself! ya bu**er!
This was the greeting that the Reverend Jack Kellet received from one of his 90-year-old parishioners, a life-long attendee of South Leith Parish Church.
It was a greeting that was met with a heartfelt kiss by way of a response.
The book is subtitled "A Scottish Minister looks back on a life of surprises."
The Reverend Jack Kellett describes himself as a lucky man. (Though some say that by-and-large, we create out own luck.)
However, his luck includes being fortunate enough to fall under the very positive influence of the famed Iona Community as a young man and lucky enough to have a surprise weekend at Balmoral Castle in the presence of the Queen.
He had experienced life within the working class community of Edinburgh, born to parents who had known what hard times were like for the desperately poor of Edinburgh.
He knew the love of his parents that was demonstrated in the taciturn fashion that was their way.
He also considered himself lucky to have fallen for a girl who also fell for him, despite, as he saw it, all his faults.
And lucky to have raised a family of three children.
He was surprised to find the Queen was much more ordinary than he had suspected might be the case, and didn't get into any trouble at all when he accidentally stepped on the paw of a Corgi who had been dashing toward its breakfast!
He also had the pleasure of saying grace, a short one, much appreciated by the Royal family and the staff, at a meal at Balmoral, where he had stayed as a result of being asked to preach a sermon at nearby Craathie.
Hobnobbing with the Queen and the Royal family. But that wasn't how it had begun for Jack Kellett.
His father was a grate builder who was proud of the fact that he was able to earn a halfpenny an hour more that the other tradesmen and he was the only employee never to have been paid off during the great depression.
He wrote with great eloquence about the childhood games of the 1930s, games like What's the Time, Mr Wolf? and the like.
He touches on childhood ailments, his school days, his National Service, his involvement with football and cricket and marriage to the great love of his life, Ena.
It was when he and Ena were enjoying a holiday on the Isle of Iona that Jack realised he had a calling to be a church minister.
And, after six years of theological study at Edinburgh University, that is what he became.
He proved himself to be a more than capable church minister, always busy being a husband and father and working for the members of his congregation and known for working with other churches in his area, including building strong links with local Catholic churches.
This book is compelling, amusing and truthful, written by a man who is, truly, a man of his God.
It is published by Matador at £10.99 and is a compelling autobiography.
This was the greeting that the Reverend Jack Kellet received from one of his 90-year-old parishioners, a life-long attendee of South Leith Parish Church.
It was a greeting that was met with a heartfelt kiss by way of a response.
The book is subtitled "A Scottish Minister looks back on a life of surprises."
The Reverend Jack Kellett describes himself as a lucky man. (Though some say that by-and-large, we create out own luck.)
However, his luck includes being fortunate enough to fall under the very positive influence of the famed Iona Community as a young man and lucky enough to have a surprise weekend at Balmoral Castle in the presence of the Queen.
He had experienced life within the working class community of Edinburgh, born to parents who had known what hard times were like for the desperately poor of Edinburgh.
He knew the love of his parents that was demonstrated in the taciturn fashion that was their way.
He also considered himself lucky to have fallen for a girl who also fell for him, despite, as he saw it, all his faults.
And lucky to have raised a family of three children.
He was surprised to find the Queen was much more ordinary than he had suspected might be the case, and didn't get into any trouble at all when he accidentally stepped on the paw of a Corgi who had been dashing toward its breakfast!
He also had the pleasure of saying grace, a short one, much appreciated by the Royal family and the staff, at a meal at Balmoral, where he had stayed as a result of being asked to preach a sermon at nearby Craathie.
Hobnobbing with the Queen and the Royal family. But that wasn't how it had begun for Jack Kellett.
His father was a grate builder who was proud of the fact that he was able to earn a halfpenny an hour more that the other tradesmen and he was the only employee never to have been paid off during the great depression.
He wrote with great eloquence about the childhood games of the 1930s, games like What's the Time, Mr Wolf? and the like.
He touches on childhood ailments, his school days, his National Service, his involvement with football and cricket and marriage to the great love of his life, Ena.
It was when he and Ena were enjoying a holiday on the Isle of Iona that Jack realised he had a calling to be a church minister.
And, after six years of theological study at Edinburgh University, that is what he became.
He proved himself to be a more than capable church minister, always busy being a husband and father and working for the members of his congregation and known for working with other churches in his area, including building strong links with local Catholic churches.
This book is compelling, amusing and truthful, written by a man who is, truly, a man of his God.
It is published by Matador at £10.99 and is a compelling autobiography.
Sisters of Fury
Sisters of Fury is a thriller by Keith Jackobsen.
It is set in the heady and exciting times of the late 1960s.
Jack Roberts is a northerner who comes from a family that is neither working class nor really middle class. sort of lower middle class, really, for want of a better description,
He is a bit of a drifter, intellectually speaking. He has neither dreams for his future or ambitions.
But then he meets Hasan, a fellow student.
He and Hasan become good, close friends, and Jack idolises his new friend and he seems to become a new person, a person with hopes, dreams and ambitions.
But is Hasan all he seems? Is there a darker, edgier side to him?
But when their time at university comes to an end, it seems that Hasan just vanished from Jack's life.
So Jack returns to his aimless, intellectual drifter existence. But he never forgets about his exotic, somewhat mysterious friend.
Years later Jack learns that Hasan has written a book and is embarking on a tour to promote his book.
Intrigued, Jack decides to follow in the footsteps of his friend on the tour, yet decides, for some reason, to keep a distance between himself and his friend.
But then Jack notices that he is not the only person who is keeping Hasan under observation, for he is being tailed by a woman who seems to be fragile.
Jack meets the woman and realises that she might not be quite what she seems. For example, is she as fragile as she appears to be? And if she is, what caused her fragility?
Eventually Jack begins to understand that not only Hasaan is in danger, that he, too, could be at risk.
But from what? Or whom? And was Hasan all he had seemed to be?
This novel is described as Hitchcockian and as it exists in a maelstrom of angst, anger, mistrust and duplicity, that is as good a description as any.
It is published by The Book Guild and is available from the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop, to be found on the righthand side of this review.
It is set in the heady and exciting times of the late 1960s.
Jack Roberts is a northerner who comes from a family that is neither working class nor really middle class. sort of lower middle class, really, for want of a better description,
He is a bit of a drifter, intellectually speaking. He has neither dreams for his future or ambitions.
But then he meets Hasan, a fellow student.
He and Hasan become good, close friends, and Jack idolises his new friend and he seems to become a new person, a person with hopes, dreams and ambitions.
But is Hasan all he seems? Is there a darker, edgier side to him?
But when their time at university comes to an end, it seems that Hasan just vanished from Jack's life.
So Jack returns to his aimless, intellectual drifter existence. But he never forgets about his exotic, somewhat mysterious friend.
Years later Jack learns that Hasan has written a book and is embarking on a tour to promote his book.
Intrigued, Jack decides to follow in the footsteps of his friend on the tour, yet decides, for some reason, to keep a distance between himself and his friend.
But then Jack notices that he is not the only person who is keeping Hasan under observation, for he is being tailed by a woman who seems to be fragile.
Jack meets the woman and realises that she might not be quite what she seems. For example, is she as fragile as she appears to be? And if she is, what caused her fragility?
Eventually Jack begins to understand that not only Hasaan is in danger, that he, too, could be at risk.
But from what? Or whom? And was Hasan all he had seemed to be?
This novel is described as Hitchcockian and as it exists in a maelstrom of angst, anger, mistrust and duplicity, that is as good a description as any.
It is published by The Book Guild and is available from the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop, to be found on the righthand side of this review.
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