A while ago I was delighted to read a novel by Alistair Laver that was set in the fictional Yorkshire seaside town of Whitborough, which is based on Scarborough and Whitby.
Mystery City is the second novel in the series. It is written with a deft and light-hearted touch and features an incredibly large cast of characters, a rhino that seems to be suffering from some kind of depressive ailment and a couple of somewhat naughty dogs.
You'll have come across Whithborough in the novel Treasure Trove (if you haven't, please read that novel, too) and you'll be pleased to know that this Yorkshire coastal town is still just as interesting in this new novel.
Actions are never (well, hardly ever) without consequences and the ramifications of the actions that were undertaken during Treasure Trove are still reverberating through and around Whitborough.
From an unfortunate incident in July 1645 when devilish beasts attack a flock right through to the present day when masked men in black overalls turn up at the local zoo, and whilst there's a race against either time or the local police force when agents from GCHQ attempt to unravel the mysterious events of the terrorist attack that traumatised the inhabitants of the town during Treasure Trove.
Why are their wolves in the area? What is happening at the Valhalla Retirement Home?
And what, exactly, was there beneath the Mystery City?
Be prepared to strap yourself in for one heck of a wild literary ride!
The book is published by Matador at £7.99 and is available to purchase here https://goo.gl/wdCFDG.
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Sunday, 13 August 2017
When Snow Fell
When Snow Fell is a novel that reflects on the Russian October Revolution in 1917.
Author Barbara Kastelin takes her readers through a vivid exploration of the impact of these events upon a family who must flee their native land and seek involuntary exile in Great Britain.
The novel is timely for a variety of reasons, it is the centenary of the Russian revolution and the world is, again, witnessing another era where mass migrations are taking place with all the resultant problems that such events bring in their wake.
There is a personal dimension to this novel as it relates the story of Barbara Kastelin's father's flight from Russia as a result of the revolution and the sad knowledge that their family would never be able to return to their ancestral homeland.
When Snow Fell tells the story of three generations of a once aristocratic White Russian family and their attempts (barely successful, in truth) to integrate into the Oxfordshire of the 1960s.
Perhaps it was that, compared to their previous lifestyle of opulence, glamour and extravagance amidst Czarist Russia, the England of the 1960s was just a little bit dull, in comparison?
The story is told with insight compassion and with a leavening of humour.
Eventually the family begins to run through their once copious financial resources and, in order to survive, they fin themselves in the situation of having to start selling off items of property.
They are so desperate that they must seek compensation from their old enemies, the Soviet Union.
This leads to interesting confrontations between the old order of Russia and the new order of Russia, with clashes not only if ideologies but also of personalities, too.
The result is that old, long-buried mysteries are brought to the surface and some unexpected results, including murder, are brought about.
This is a fascinating novel in the fine tradition of Russian literature.
It is published by Matador at £7.99 and can be obtained here https://goo.gl/wdCFDG.
Author Barbara Kastelin takes her readers through a vivid exploration of the impact of these events upon a family who must flee their native land and seek involuntary exile in Great Britain.
The novel is timely for a variety of reasons, it is the centenary of the Russian revolution and the world is, again, witnessing another era where mass migrations are taking place with all the resultant problems that such events bring in their wake.
There is a personal dimension to this novel as it relates the story of Barbara Kastelin's father's flight from Russia as a result of the revolution and the sad knowledge that their family would never be able to return to their ancestral homeland.
When Snow Fell tells the story of three generations of a once aristocratic White Russian family and their attempts (barely successful, in truth) to integrate into the Oxfordshire of the 1960s.
Perhaps it was that, compared to their previous lifestyle of opulence, glamour and extravagance amidst Czarist Russia, the England of the 1960s was just a little bit dull, in comparison?
The story is told with insight compassion and with a leavening of humour.
Eventually the family begins to run through their once copious financial resources and, in order to survive, they fin themselves in the situation of having to start selling off items of property.
They are so desperate that they must seek compensation from their old enemies, the Soviet Union.
This leads to interesting confrontations between the old order of Russia and the new order of Russia, with clashes not only if ideologies but also of personalities, too.
The result is that old, long-buried mysteries are brought to the surface and some unexpected results, including murder, are brought about.
This is a fascinating novel in the fine tradition of Russian literature.
It is published by Matador at £7.99 and can be obtained here https://goo.gl/wdCFDG.
Absolutely Galapagos
There was a connection between Brian and Charles Darwin. They were both fascinated by the idea of visiting the Galapagos Islands.
Brian's interest was probably less prosaic than Darwin's, Brian was inspired to make his journey there because of a boat. Pretty mch.
So Brian and his long-suffering wife Sandra made the trip of a lifetime.
The boat turned out to be absolute dream and the islands were all they could have hoped for and much more, besides.
However, it is probably true that Brian was not quite what the other passengers had expected, or perhaps wanted.
Brian was filled with knowledge on South American countries that was perhaps not as interesting as Brian might have presumed.
And his views on a wide range of many and varied topics would enthrall, bewilder, engage or enrage people, including Sandra. Who was certainly not enthused by the only positive fact that Brian had elicited from the disastrous situation in Venezuela was that it had produced an inordinate number of Miss Universes or Miss Worlds.
And Brian did have a point -of sorts- how were great works of literature created before the advent of creative writing courses?
The worrying thing about Brian is that, no matter how exasperating he might be, he is often right about things, but not perhaps always in an especially useful way.
The book is published by Matador at £9.99 and is available at https://goo.gl/wdCFDG.
Brian's interest was probably less prosaic than Darwin's, Brian was inspired to make his journey there because of a boat. Pretty mch.
So Brian and his long-suffering wife Sandra made the trip of a lifetime.
The boat turned out to be absolute dream and the islands were all they could have hoped for and much more, besides.
However, it is probably true that Brian was not quite what the other passengers had expected, or perhaps wanted.
Brian was filled with knowledge on South American countries that was perhaps not as interesting as Brian might have presumed.
And his views on a wide range of many and varied topics would enthrall, bewilder, engage or enrage people, including Sandra. Who was certainly not enthused by the only positive fact that Brian had elicited from the disastrous situation in Venezuela was that it had produced an inordinate number of Miss Universes or Miss Worlds.
And Brian did have a point -of sorts- how were great works of literature created before the advent of creative writing courses?
The worrying thing about Brian is that, no matter how exasperating he might be, he is often right about things, but not perhaps always in an especially useful way.
The book is published by Matador at £9.99 and is available at https://goo.gl/wdCFDG.
Sunday, 6 August 2017
Networking Thoughfully
Networking Thoughtfully is a very valuable new book from networking expert Martin Wheadon.
It is short and to the point. It is designed to be read in thirty minutes and Martin Wheadon is confident that this book could well change your life for the better.
It's a guide for people who need to network and to build relationships but who are not exactly sure where they should start or what they should do.
Readers are taken through a clear and concise step-by-step guide which will help them to achieve good, positive results.
Readers will learn how to begin conversations, plus devise methods by which they can introduce themselves to other people.
Wheadon has written the book based on his many years experience within the banking sector and also from creating and operating his own networking business, the High Tea Club.
This book is both comprehensive and also accessible and at £8.99 is a must purchase for everyone in business, commerce or employment as everyone will find something of benefit in this short but vitally informative work.
You can purchase it here https://goo.gl/wdCFDG.
It is short and to the point. It is designed to be read in thirty minutes and Martin Wheadon is confident that this book could well change your life for the better.
It's a guide for people who need to network and to build relationships but who are not exactly sure where they should start or what they should do.
Readers are taken through a clear and concise step-by-step guide which will help them to achieve good, positive results.
Readers will learn how to begin conversations, plus devise methods by which they can introduce themselves to other people.
Wheadon has written the book based on his many years experience within the banking sector and also from creating and operating his own networking business, the High Tea Club.
This book is both comprehensive and also accessible and at £8.99 is a must purchase for everyone in business, commerce or employment as everyone will find something of benefit in this short but vitally informative work.
You can purchase it here https://goo.gl/wdCFDG.
Elizabeth, William... and Me
Elizabeth, William and Me... is a novel by S. Lynn Scott.
Ally has a fairly normal life, that was until she finds Elizabeth I in her pantry and later discovers William Shakespeare in her bath.
And that's just the beginning of what would turn out to be an amazing adventure for Ally.
Queen Elizabeth proved to be quite crotchety, an Shakespeare seemed to like gawping at women in modern dress... but how had they travelled forward through hundreds of years to modern day England? And why had they come?
Much confusion abounds. After all, coping with modern England was a major problem for our two Elizabethans and Ally seems equally befuddled by this momentous event.
Queen Elizabeth has a mission that she must complete. And, being an absolute monarch, she is used to getting everything done in exactly the way she wants it to be done.
Ally, too, with her somewhat dysfunctional family, is searching for something, too.
Can the arrival of Queen Elizabeth I and William Shakespeare help her identify what it is and also help her to track it down and recover it?
But if Ally can see Elizabeth and William Shakespeare, surely everyone else can? But what if they can't?
What could this mean?
And can Ally find what she is seeking?
Could Dr Pinch help her?
This is an extremely well-written debut novel from actress and theatrical director S. Lynn Scott.
It is a very moving story with elements of humour, too.
Hopefully we will be seeing many more novels from S. Lynn Scott in the future.
The book is published by Matador at £9.99 and can be purchased at https://goo.gl/wdCFDG.
Ally has a fairly normal life, that was until she finds Elizabeth I in her pantry and later discovers William Shakespeare in her bath.
And that's just the beginning of what would turn out to be an amazing adventure for Ally.
Queen Elizabeth proved to be quite crotchety, an Shakespeare seemed to like gawping at women in modern dress... but how had they travelled forward through hundreds of years to modern day England? And why had they come?
Much confusion abounds. After all, coping with modern England was a major problem for our two Elizabethans and Ally seems equally befuddled by this momentous event.
Queen Elizabeth has a mission that she must complete. And, being an absolute monarch, she is used to getting everything done in exactly the way she wants it to be done.
Ally, too, with her somewhat dysfunctional family, is searching for something, too.
Can the arrival of Queen Elizabeth I and William Shakespeare help her identify what it is and also help her to track it down and recover it?
But if Ally can see Elizabeth and William Shakespeare, surely everyone else can? But what if they can't?
What could this mean?
And can Ally find what she is seeking?
Could Dr Pinch help her?
This is an extremely well-written debut novel from actress and theatrical director S. Lynn Scott.
It is a very moving story with elements of humour, too.
Hopefully we will be seeing many more novels from S. Lynn Scott in the future.
The book is published by Matador at £9.99 and can be purchased at https://goo.gl/wdCFDG.
Saturday, 5 August 2017
The Wireless in the Corner
The Wireless in the Corner is an autobiography by Alan Palmer, which is based on entries from his contemporary diaries, family letters, photographs taken from family albums and also newspaper cuttings.
It is Alan's highly interesting and entertaining account of growing up in suburban London during the second quarter of the last century.
The author recalls the stresses and strains of living through the years of the Blitz, the later flying bombs and the V Rockets and the times of peace and contentment.
The book also covers the years before and after the Second World War. He reveals that he was named Alan -like so many other babies at that time- in honour of Alan Cobham the World War 1 Veteran who was the first man to fly to and from Australia in 1926.
We learn of the impact of the depression, of Pelican and Ekco radios (which lasted for 34 years and was the best bargain his father ever had.
In the then distinct town of Ilford there were 'pirate' buses competing for business against the "regular" buses, he recalls the local station, the cinema, the shops, the houses that they lived in.
There were secrets that were scandals including the case of the murder of Percy Thomas, stabbed to death by his wife's lover.
Letters in the lover's flat from his wife Edith to the lover revealed that she had attempted to kill him by poisoning him or by putting powdered glass in his porridge.
The lover was charged with murder and the widow with acting as his accomplice.
Alan Palmer is a well known author of historical works and this book has received praise from people such as Antonia Fraser.
The book is published by Matador at £10.99 and can be bought here https://goo.gl/wdCFDG.
It is Alan's highly interesting and entertaining account of growing up in suburban London during the second quarter of the last century.
The author recalls the stresses and strains of living through the years of the Blitz, the later flying bombs and the V Rockets and the times of peace and contentment.
The book also covers the years before and after the Second World War. He reveals that he was named Alan -like so many other babies at that time- in honour of Alan Cobham the World War 1 Veteran who was the first man to fly to and from Australia in 1926.
We learn of the impact of the depression, of Pelican and Ekco radios (which lasted for 34 years and was the best bargain his father ever had.
In the then distinct town of Ilford there were 'pirate' buses competing for business against the "regular" buses, he recalls the local station, the cinema, the shops, the houses that they lived in.
There were secrets that were scandals including the case of the murder of Percy Thomas, stabbed to death by his wife's lover.
Letters in the lover's flat from his wife Edith to the lover revealed that she had attempted to kill him by poisoning him or by putting powdered glass in his porridge.
The lover was charged with murder and the widow with acting as his accomplice.
Alan Palmer is a well known author of historical works and this book has received praise from people such as Antonia Fraser.
The book is published by Matador at £10.99 and can be bought here https://goo.gl/wdCFDG.
Barry and Bev The Big Concert
Barry and Bev The Big Concert is a humorous novel by actress Rita May who has decided to make the crossing over from acting to writing with this, her debut novel.
The novel is set in a town in Northern England
The community of Kenthorpe is home to the Kenthorpe Working Men's Club. At least, it is for the moment, for the club is in dire financial difficulties.
The organising Committee work hard to attempt to address this situation and they come up with a number of corrective measures including booking a to-class act booked for concerts every Saturday night.
As word of this new Saturday night concert spreads, the number of people visiting the club quickly grows.
This brings about problems for the women of Kenthorpe because there are often not enough seats for them all as the club is a stickler for "Rule 57" which bars women from the much larger "Men's Only" room. The rule dates back to the time when the club was founded in 1932.
The brings about a rift between the women and their menfolk. The dispute brings about attention from the local media, but when the story gains the attention of the national press, things start to get even more difficult.
But then when they thought things couldn't get any worse, they did and in a devastating way that nobody could foresee.
As Rita May began her career as a singer in northern workingmen's clubs, the novel is a bird's eye view of a very real lifestyle.
The book is published by Matador at £7.99 and can be purchased at https://goo.gl/wdCFDG.
You will have seen Rital May in a number of roles including films like The Gamekeeper, When Saturday Comes, Red Riding: In the Year of Our Lord 1974. And TV roles in TV roles in
Play for Today (several roles) Fallen Hero, Coronation Street (several roles) Crown Court,
The Gathering Seed, Juliet Bravo, Mitch, Edge of Darkness, Wish Me Luck, Doctors, (several roles) The Bill, and many more.
She has also written a number of stage plays.
The novel is set in a town in Northern England
The community of Kenthorpe is home to the Kenthorpe Working Men's Club. At least, it is for the moment, for the club is in dire financial difficulties.
The organising Committee work hard to attempt to address this situation and they come up with a number of corrective measures including booking a to-class act booked for concerts every Saturday night.
As word of this new Saturday night concert spreads, the number of people visiting the club quickly grows.
This brings about problems for the women of Kenthorpe because there are often not enough seats for them all as the club is a stickler for "Rule 57" which bars women from the much larger "Men's Only" room. The rule dates back to the time when the club was founded in 1932.
The brings about a rift between the women and their menfolk. The dispute brings about attention from the local media, but when the story gains the attention of the national press, things start to get even more difficult.
But then when they thought things couldn't get any worse, they did and in a devastating way that nobody could foresee.
As Rita May began her career as a singer in northern workingmen's clubs, the novel is a bird's eye view of a very real lifestyle.
The book is published by Matador at £7.99 and can be purchased at https://goo.gl/wdCFDG.
You will have seen Rital May in a number of roles including films like The Gamekeeper, When Saturday Comes, Red Riding: In the Year of Our Lord 1974. And TV roles in TV roles in
Play for Today (several roles) Fallen Hero, Coronation Street (several roles) Crown Court,
The Gathering Seed, Juliet Bravo, Mitch, Edge of Darkness, Wish Me Luck, Doctors, (several roles) The Bill, and many more.
She has also written a number of stage plays.
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