Nobody is Better Than Me is a passionate and compelling book written by Kate Vialva.
The concepts within this book are rooted very firmly in Kate's faith in God and Jesus.
Kate is a trained counsellor and has worked within the NHS as a staff nurse and has gained experiences and knowledge which have helped shape her into the person that she is today.
It is written with the intention of giving the reader a better understanding of what they can do should they find themselves facing major adversities and problems within their own lives, or perhaps when they find a friend or family member who is facing a dilemma, based on Christian principles.
Kate's message is a simple one, awaken the spirit within us so that we may reflect and recognise who we really are.
In the introduction she reveals the basis for her apparently sudden revelation that she should write what would become her book, Nobody is Better Than Me.
One point that she does make in the introduction is iterated and reiterated several times throughout the book is that: "As long as we become our brother's keeper, we can overcome the many storms of life."
The book is published by Matador at £9.99 and is available from the That's Books and Entertainment Bookshop, which you you will find to the right hand side of this review.
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Monday 2 May 2016
Sea Journal
Sea Journal, written by Lisa Woollett, is one of the best researched, best written, most readable books that I have encountered in many years.
It is a wonderful book that covers a year long wandering along the coastal areas of Britain.
Lisa covers a wide range of topics and subjects. From natural history to evolution, to geology, latest scientific thinking and ancient myths and racial memories of cataclysmic floods that radically altered the shape of the British Isles, meaning that vaste swathes of land were lost to what is now the North Sea and the Irish Sea.
We learn about an adult and a barefooted four year old child who were walking through a forested area in Wales in what is now Cardigan Bay. We know this event happened because they left their footprints, now visible again, after they were created at some time between 4,000 to 6,000 years ago.
We read about skates and rays, of lost forests once again rediscovered thousands of years later, of great storms of the past that helped alter the very shape of our lands.
Then there's the tale of the Great Lego Spill of 1997. Whe3n five million Lego pieces were lost overboard in a great storm.
There's images of seaweeds of various types washed up after storms, branched sponges and of sea monsters heard and monsters seen. And, of course, identified as not being especially monstrous at all.
Lisa also meets wavewatchers who like nothing more than to visit the beaches and watch out for bigger and better waves, a potentially risky sort of a pastime, others who are beachcombers like Lisa, people who search out and seek out items that have been washed ashore.
(EDITOR: When I was a child I lost my spade on a beach in Wimereux, a coastal town in Northern France. We returned the next year. And, to my delight, I found what I considered in my childish enthusiasm to be moy spade. It had been battered by the waves and smoothed by the sands of the beach so was not exactly the same,m but in my heart I knew it was my wooden and metal spade. But I left it as I knew, even at that young age, that it was no longer truly mine, that it belonged on the beach of Wimereux.)
That incident left in me a sense of wonder about all things coastal. A wonder that this book has rekindled.
It is published by Zart Books (www.zartbooks.co.uk) in association with the Eden Project and costs £14.99. It's a book for everyone, but will make a welcome addition to any council library service and to any school, college or university library.
You can buy the book at the That's Books and Entertainment Bookshop, which you will find to the right hand side of this book review. Or to make a direct purchase of the title please visit https://goo.gl/MBWfyo.
It is a wonderful book that covers a year long wandering along the coastal areas of Britain.
Lisa covers a wide range of topics and subjects. From natural history to evolution, to geology, latest scientific thinking and ancient myths and racial memories of cataclysmic floods that radically altered the shape of the British Isles, meaning that vaste swathes of land were lost to what is now the North Sea and the Irish Sea.
We learn about an adult and a barefooted four year old child who were walking through a forested area in Wales in what is now Cardigan Bay. We know this event happened because they left their footprints, now visible again, after they were created at some time between 4,000 to 6,000 years ago.
We read about skates and rays, of lost forests once again rediscovered thousands of years later, of great storms of the past that helped alter the very shape of our lands.
Then there's the tale of the Great Lego Spill of 1997. Whe3n five million Lego pieces were lost overboard in a great storm.
There's images of seaweeds of various types washed up after storms, branched sponges and of sea monsters heard and monsters seen. And, of course, identified as not being especially monstrous at all.
Lisa also meets wavewatchers who like nothing more than to visit the beaches and watch out for bigger and better waves, a potentially risky sort of a pastime, others who are beachcombers like Lisa, people who search out and seek out items that have been washed ashore.
(EDITOR: When I was a child I lost my spade on a beach in Wimereux, a coastal town in Northern France. We returned the next year. And, to my delight, I found what I considered in my childish enthusiasm to be moy spade. It had been battered by the waves and smoothed by the sands of the beach so was not exactly the same,m but in my heart I knew it was my wooden and metal spade. But I left it as I knew, even at that young age, that it was no longer truly mine, that it belonged on the beach of Wimereux.)
That incident left in me a sense of wonder about all things coastal. A wonder that this book has rekindled.
It is published by Zart Books (www.zartbooks.co.uk) in association with the Eden Project and costs £14.99. It's a book for everyone, but will make a welcome addition to any council library service and to any school, college or university library.
You can buy the book at the That's Books and Entertainment Bookshop, which you will find to the right hand side of this book review. Or to make a direct purchase of the title please visit https://goo.gl/MBWfyo.
Dragonsong
Dragonsong is a complex and a most praiseworthy novel (though, in truth, it is far more than being a mere novel) set very firmly in the fantasy genre.
It tells the story of Rebekah, a daughter of the wizard Merlin.
Rebekah is heartbroken, driven utterly insane by the murder of her one true love, Vidar.
With her soul tormented with a desire for revenge, she seeks out the Prince of Demons and she pleads with him to turn her into a dragon so that she may seek out her revenge against those she blames for the death of Vidar.
Unfortunately she has been tricked into believing that her father Merlin was responsible for the murder and she targets Merlin for her retribution.
But who has abused Rebekah so, by arranging this stratagem, this evil subterfuge? It is Oberon, the Elvish Captain-King. This was all done out of the twisted, jealousy of Oberon, due to his unrequited love for Rebekah.
But for all his machinations, scheming and clever plotting, he was utterly blinded to the terrible devastation and misery that his foolish actions would bring down upon the world of Gaia.
In order for Merlin to correct the great evil that Oberon has wrought upon the world of Gaia, Merlin must traverse the barrier of time itself, travelling back to locate a warrior of pure heart, Lady Attie.
With Michael, the seer of Albion to assist her, they must visit the very gates of Hell to obtain the sleep stone. For only this will persuade the dragon to fall into a slumber.
But this is not without risk. For if they fail to return the sleep stone to its rightful place at the mouth of Hell in time, then the demon army will awake and destroy Gaia and all its inhabitants.
Gaia's future and her destiny rely on Time to save it. But will the Asgardian gods be able to find a solution to stop this?
The book is a unique creation as it is, apparently, "an Arthurian Epic Fantasy in a formerly unknown meter and rhyme structure, with nothing comparable attempted since Tolkien abandoned The Fall of Arthur in 1934."
The book is published by Matador at £8.99 and can be purchased at the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop, which you will find over toward the right hand side of this review. Or click on http://goo.gl/GjK2SB instead.
It tells the story of Rebekah, a daughter of the wizard Merlin.
Rebekah is heartbroken, driven utterly insane by the murder of her one true love, Vidar.
With her soul tormented with a desire for revenge, she seeks out the Prince of Demons and she pleads with him to turn her into a dragon so that she may seek out her revenge against those she blames for the death of Vidar.
Unfortunately she has been tricked into believing that her father Merlin was responsible for the murder and she targets Merlin for her retribution.
But who has abused Rebekah so, by arranging this stratagem, this evil subterfuge? It is Oberon, the Elvish Captain-King. This was all done out of the twisted, jealousy of Oberon, due to his unrequited love for Rebekah.
But for all his machinations, scheming and clever plotting, he was utterly blinded to the terrible devastation and misery that his foolish actions would bring down upon the world of Gaia.
In order for Merlin to correct the great evil that Oberon has wrought upon the world of Gaia, Merlin must traverse the barrier of time itself, travelling back to locate a warrior of pure heart, Lady Attie.
With Michael, the seer of Albion to assist her, they must visit the very gates of Hell to obtain the sleep stone. For only this will persuade the dragon to fall into a slumber.
But this is not without risk. For if they fail to return the sleep stone to its rightful place at the mouth of Hell in time, then the demon army will awake and destroy Gaia and all its inhabitants.
Gaia's future and her destiny rely on Time to save it. But will the Asgardian gods be able to find a solution to stop this?
The book is a unique creation as it is, apparently, "an Arthurian Epic Fantasy in a formerly unknown meter and rhyme structure, with nothing comparable attempted since Tolkien abandoned The Fall of Arthur in 1934."
The book is published by Matador at £8.99 and can be purchased at the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop, which you will find over toward the right hand side of this review. Or click on http://goo.gl/GjK2SB instead.
Sunday 1 May 2016
Rose: The Awakening
Rose: The Awakening tells the story of what happened when wilful, beautiful Rose Mainessuddenly loses her father.
His death means that Rose and her mother are left destitute, living in dingy lodgings within the heart of the East End of Victorian London.
Into their lives comes the mysterious Mr Weir, who her mother agrees to become a live in housekeeper for.
Rapidly there develops a relationship between Rose and Mr Weir that is a strong love-hate affair.
Rose is aware that she must take strong action if she is to survive.
The novel is set amidst swirling Victorian fogs, of shady dwelling places and of secret brothels.
Yet all is far from whst it appears to be. For who is Mr Weir? Who or what is Rose?
Krys Kingston bring the reader a glimpse behind polite society into a world of death, of murder and of the undead who stalk the world of the living.
This book is published by The Book Guild at £9.99 and is available via the That's Books and Entertainment online bookshop, which is to the right hand side of this book review.
It is the first book in a trilogy.
His death means that Rose and her mother are left destitute, living in dingy lodgings within the heart of the East End of Victorian London.
Into their lives comes the mysterious Mr Weir, who her mother agrees to become a live in housekeeper for.
Rapidly there develops a relationship between Rose and Mr Weir that is a strong love-hate affair.
Rose is aware that she must take strong action if she is to survive.
The novel is set amidst swirling Victorian fogs, of shady dwelling places and of secret brothels.
Yet all is far from whst it appears to be. For who is Mr Weir? Who or what is Rose?
Krys Kingston bring the reader a glimpse behind polite society into a world of death, of murder and of the undead who stalk the world of the living.
This book is published by The Book Guild at £9.99 and is available via the That's Books and Entertainment online bookshop, which is to the right hand side of this book review.
It is the first book in a trilogy.
Two Bullets in Sarajevo
The book, Two Bullets in Sarajevo, is a novelisation by historian and author D. Lawrence-Young of the tragic events that caused the world to be tipped into not one but two world wars.
It tells the story of Princip, a poor student who became wrapped up in the machinations of the Black Hand, a Serbian nationalist organisation who had dreams of gaining freedom from Austria.
The emperor of Austria, Franz Josef has made a determination that there is on way that he could accede to these demands.
So he decides to offer a show of the strength of the empire and dispatches his nephew, Archduke Franz Ferdinand to make an official visit to Sarajevo.
Princip and his cronies decide to murder, in cold blood, the Archduke. And his wife, who in modern parlance, would be considered collateral damage.
The rest, as they say, is history.
The book barely touches upon the Great War, itself. It asks a question that seems to be all too often overlooked in the histories of those turbulent and dreadful times.
The question it asks is: "But what about the personalities behind this bald act of political murder?"
What were the members of the Black Hand like? Did they really think the assassin through?
And what of the apparently unbending Austrian rulers, the hidebound military leaders, the Serbians like Princip and his fellow revolutionaries in the Black Hand? What really motived these people, these Serbian nationalists?
And what about Archduke Franz Ferdinand, often dismissed as a stuffed shirt who would have himself sewn into his military uniforms, it is often claimed?
For far from being the stuffed shirt that he is often portrayed as, Two Bullets in Sarajevo portrays a different side to him, a romantic side that led him to marry, against all Austrian royal court protocols, the woman of his dreams, his beautiful fiancée, Sophie Chotek?
The book is published by Matador at £8.99 and works well as a work of fiction and as a primer for anyone who is a student of that time period and who wants to try to understand what happened then, 100 years ago, that set the world on fire.
It's available through the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop. You'll locate this just to the right hand side of this book review.
It tells the story of Princip, a poor student who became wrapped up in the machinations of the Black Hand, a Serbian nationalist organisation who had dreams of gaining freedom from Austria.
The emperor of Austria, Franz Josef has made a determination that there is on way that he could accede to these demands.
So he decides to offer a show of the strength of the empire and dispatches his nephew, Archduke Franz Ferdinand to make an official visit to Sarajevo.
Princip and his cronies decide to murder, in cold blood, the Archduke. And his wife, who in modern parlance, would be considered collateral damage.
The rest, as they say, is history.
The book barely touches upon the Great War, itself. It asks a question that seems to be all too often overlooked in the histories of those turbulent and dreadful times.
The question it asks is: "But what about the personalities behind this bald act of political murder?"
What were the members of the Black Hand like? Did they really think the assassin through?
And what of the apparently unbending Austrian rulers, the hidebound military leaders, the Serbians like Princip and his fellow revolutionaries in the Black Hand? What really motived these people, these Serbian nationalists?
And what about Archduke Franz Ferdinand, often dismissed as a stuffed shirt who would have himself sewn into his military uniforms, it is often claimed?
For far from being the stuffed shirt that he is often portrayed as, Two Bullets in Sarajevo portrays a different side to him, a romantic side that led him to marry, against all Austrian royal court protocols, the woman of his dreams, his beautiful fiancée, Sophie Chotek?
The book is published by Matador at £8.99 and works well as a work of fiction and as a primer for anyone who is a student of that time period and who wants to try to understand what happened then, 100 years ago, that set the world on fire.
It's available through the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop. You'll locate this just to the right hand side of this book review.
King Garnet Stories
The King Garnet Stories are tales about King Garnet told to us by author Marianne Parry and charmingly illustrated by David Hill.
The book is a collection of three stories about King Garnet, his lovely wife Queen Amanda and their good friend, a fellow King, King Grundle.
King Garnet loves all of the subjects who live within his Kingdom. Which is good, because all of his subjects love him, back!
But one morning, something isn't quite right... Something strange has happened! Because, overnight, King Garnet's legs had grown!
At first, King Garnet did not mind this one little bit! After all, who wouldn't want to be just that bit taller?
But soon poor King Garnet realised that his legs were continuing to grow, becoming longer and longer!
As the days pass by, they become so long that they were so long that they reached the bedroom door and then even went half way down the palace's grand staircase!
It soon became clear that someone had cast a spell on King Garnet to cause his legs to continue to grow longer and longer!
But who would even do such a thing to a king who was so well-loved by everyone in his kingdom?
And would his legs ever go back to their normal size?
You can also read about what happened when the King pretended he could not speak and when King Grundle was tricked into declaring war!
These stories are designed for children aged 5 to 7 and they are charmingly told and equally charmingly illustrated.
The book is idea for reading out to children and for sharing between adults and kids!
It costs £8.99 and can be purchased via the That's Books and Entertainment online bookshop. the link to which you will find to the right hand side of this book review.
The book is a collection of three stories about King Garnet, his lovely wife Queen Amanda and their good friend, a fellow King, King Grundle.
King Garnet loves all of the subjects who live within his Kingdom. Which is good, because all of his subjects love him, back!
But one morning, something isn't quite right... Something strange has happened! Because, overnight, King Garnet's legs had grown!
At first, King Garnet did not mind this one little bit! After all, who wouldn't want to be just that bit taller?
But soon poor King Garnet realised that his legs were continuing to grow, becoming longer and longer!
As the days pass by, they become so long that they were so long that they reached the bedroom door and then even went half way down the palace's grand staircase!
It soon became clear that someone had cast a spell on King Garnet to cause his legs to continue to grow longer and longer!
But who would even do such a thing to a king who was so well-loved by everyone in his kingdom?
And would his legs ever go back to their normal size?
You can also read about what happened when the King pretended he could not speak and when King Grundle was tricked into declaring war!
These stories are designed for children aged 5 to 7 and they are charmingly told and equally charmingly illustrated.
The book is idea for reading out to children and for sharing between adults and kids!
It costs £8.99 and can be purchased via the That's Books and Entertainment online bookshop. the link to which you will find to the right hand side of this book review.
High Heatherton
Set in the turbulent times of the 17th Century, it follows the fortunes of Philip Devalle, who is the younger son of an Earl.
Unfortunately for Philip he is left without a penny piece when his older brother, unfortunately declared insane and incarcerated within the tender mercies of Bedlam hospital, inherits the family estate, High Heatherton.
Philip has been serving in the army of the French and when he returns to Britain he has one aim, to obtain High Heatherton for himself.
Philip Devalle has a potentially very able ally in the form of Lord Shaftesbury. His Lordship is man of many and varied talents, including the ability to create stratagems and craft plots so his promises to Philip Devalle to use his influences with the law courts to help him regain High Heatherton were not beyond the boundaries of possibility.
But there's a rather large price attached to the help proffered by Lord Shaftsbury. For he demands, in return, that Philip Devalle assists him in a plot to place the illegitimate son of King Charles, the Duke of Monmouth, on the throne. For Shaftesbury is convinced that he could easily manipulate him, once he were placed on the throne of England.
But Philip Devalle has enemies in England, enemies who mean him harm. So he must treat them with caution and to keep as far away from them as he can. Especially as he is aware that the plot he is engaged in is treason. And the penalty for treason was an ignominious death by being hung, drawn and quartered.
He realises, in his attempts to regain what he has lost, to his mind, unfairly, that he has managed to get himself very deeply into a plot that could cost him his life.
But could he extricate himself from the situation and get what he prized?
The book is based on the real and tumultuous events of the Monmouth rebellion and is published by Matador at £9.99 and is an ideal real for lovers of historic fiction.
You can order it now at the That's Books and Entertainment bookshop, which you will find to the right-hand side of this book review.
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