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Tuesday 29 October 2019

Hedgehog Christmas

In Hedgehog Christmas David Hills brings you a heartwarming story of a new adventure for a young boy called Alistair and his good friend, Hamish the Hedgehog.

It's set just before Christmas and Alistair returns home one day to discover that there is an unusual and very sparkly box on the table in the family dining room. It was sent to him by Hamish.

In the box, Alistair finds Oscar, who is a small but very fun filled rabbit, called Oscar.

Upon the eventual arrival of Christmas Eve, Oscar insists on taking Alistair out into the snow-bedecked garden to play. Oscar takes Alistair through a hjole in the garden where they are faced with a gigantic door made of ice.

Mr Tilly, Hamish's rat friend and Hamish greet them at the doorway and instantly the friends are all off on an incredible Christmas adventure.

There's a hedgehog sledding race, an absolutely splendid Hedgehog Christmas party and the wonderful opportunity to have an audience with the Queen of the Hedgehogs in her sparkling palace!

Then Alistair wakes up in bed, in his own bedroom. So, it was all as dream, was it? Perhaps not. But to learn what happens next, you'll need to read the book.

It's published by The Book Guild at £6.99 and it has got to be on your Christmas book gift list for Christmas 2019!

The Knobbly, Wobbly, Bobbly Celeriac

The Knobbly, Wobbly, Bobbly Celeriac s a highly entertaining bit very educational book that is aimed at inspiring children and their parents to get into some healthy eating habits.

Children will learn about the vegetables that are available, but in a fresh and very fun-filled way.

There are rhymes to help the vegetables come alive to the children and a whole load of fantastic, yet fairly simple, recipes for Mums, dads and Children (under guidance from adults, of course!) to try out for themselves.

Read along whilst Alex and Morgan and their mum learn all about different and new vegetables, how to select them, how to prepare them and how to cook them.

The illustrations in the book are bright and colourful and the book was written by Alexandra Campbell in cooperation with Purely Nutrition Ltd.

It is published by Matador at £9.99 and really should be under every Christmas tree this year.

It's Complicated

It's Complicated is a book about the searching for true love. How complicated, exactly, could it be? How difficult? Well, it turns out that for Michelle, a woman with two children and who is in her middle years, it is both complicated and difficult.

Michelle's life has been destroyed when she discovers that the love of her life, her partner is actually a cheating rat.

So, Michele decides that she'd like to dip her toes back into the dating pool.

But now, years after she last dated, the situation is vastly different. And she decides to surf the online dating websites in her searches for companionship and, hopefully, love.

She meets, or communicates, with many different men. There are men who are tedious, who are overly committed to their jobs to the exclusion of everything else in their lives, including love. No wonder they are on a dating site.

There are sports fanatics, the mentally deluded, men who are trying to operate a scam on the hapless women they try to get their claws into on the dating sites.

Michelle was horrified to discover a sub-set of the men on the dating sites who were leading a double life, pretending to be single on the dating sites, whilst pretending to be a loving, dutiful husband to the wife back at home.

And when questioned about their marital status, would come out with the old cliche: "It's complicated."

It's a book that veers from being utterly hilarious to quite moving. Michele Paul has written a very entertaining book that is all the more interesting because it's not fiction, it's actually a memoir!

It's published by The Book Guild at £8.99.

Monday 28 October 2019

Brexit - The Benefit of Hindsight

In Brexit - The Benefit of Hindsight Industry expert Peace E.  Ani presents readers with an illuminating analysis of the likely economic impact of Brexit.

It's three years on from the most important referendum vote in a generation (the last such an important referendum vote was the first European Referendum in 1974) there have been many different Brexit Secretaries, several rejected deals, much debate that has generated more heat than light, yet the fundamental question remain, according to the author, what, exactly, does Britain want from Brexit?

Some people claim that the financial sector in the UK will be most at risk, which would have a knock on impact on the rest of the British economy.

Despite being able to access the Single Market, a substantial proportion of the financial services industry actually voted to leave.

The author points out that, far from being informed by xenophobia or anti-immigration sentiments, recent research indicates hat the leave vote was based on a rational analysis and assessment of the costs and the benefits of continued EU membership for Britain. As for the financial sector this was also influenced by "post-crisis regulatory reform."The industry, points out Peace E.  Ani, was disproportionately impacted by Brexit due the "divergence of business models within the industry, based on the relative reliance on domestic, international or European trade."

As a financial services professional with in excess of 15 years' experience in the industry, Peace E. Ani is well placed to ask these very important questions and posit some answers to them.

Questions such as: What does the UK want from Brexit? will our economy suffer? Or could there be some benefits for Britain in a post-Brexit world?

The book is published by Matador and should be required reading for everyone be they pro-Brexit or anti-Brexit.

It is published by Matador at £8.99.

Triton

In Triton we go on a journey of sex, booze and rock 'n' roll, in the Devonshire countryside of the 1950s.

Johnny, Len and Danny are three typical teen lads of their era. Well, of any era, to an extent. Their lives revolve around sex, their motorbikes and rock 'n' roll music.

Johnny is a mechanic who is very keen to leave home, but he know that, twelve months down the line, National Service will come knocking on whatever door he is living behind.

However, he has his treasured Triton motorbike on which he lavishes his attention to take his mind off the stuff he cannot do anything about.

Then there is Len. Len is a bit different from his mates. He is an ex-public schoolboy, who has found himself sent off the the Royal Navy, (not a usual national Service posting, it must be said) and as for Danny? He is working as a farm labourer without, it appears, a care in the whole world.

The three lads enjoy their lives to the full, with bikes, booze and birds.

But what if there was a dark secret that lurked beneath the surface, a dark secret that was unspeakable and which could blow their cosy existence apart?

This is a very moving an thoughtful book that looks at some difficult yet important themes.

It is written by Morgan Smith who is an award-winning author. She has enjoyed writing since her childhood.

The book is published by The Book Guild at £9.99.book

Son of a Jacobite

In Son of a Jacobite author Professor T. J. Lovat employs research into his own family's history to write this historical work of fiction.

It's April, 1746. Thomas Lovat was born on the last day of the Jacobite Rebellion that took place at Culloden.

As he was being born, his father was breathing his last, killed on the field of battle.

The rest of Thomas' life is coloured and deeply affected by the loss of his father and also by the impact of the subsequent Highland Clearances.

Thomas grew up aware of his heritage and also of the hurt and anger that the events had engendered. He was a somewhat confused young man, as he grew into his adulthood.

He leaves Britain and travels to the Middle East, where he meets and weds the first love of his life, who bears him a child.

Upon returning the Britain, Thomas joins the British Army and leaves for America, in the time prior to the American War of Independence. When the revolution flares up, Thomas finds himself conflicted as he struggles to come to terms with his oen Jacobite heritage and his sworn duties as an officer in the British Army.

It is a moving account with historical fact interwoven with intelligent and well thought out speculation to fill in the gaps of the historical narrative.

It is published by Matador on 28th November at £12.00.

Sorry, Luv, I'll Send Another Car

In Sorry, Luv, I'll Send Another Car by Nigel Springthorpe, we meet up with Andy Marshall.

Andy has spent three decades working as a civil servant, but his worsening health brought about a lengthy period of unemployment. following his unplanned and unwelcome early retirement.

But Andy has a family to look after and support, so the strain is beginning to tell on him.

Although his wife doesn't want him to do it, Andy decides to throw his lot in with a private hire firm that has seen better days and to begin to work as a driver for them.

This thrusts a bemused Andy into a bizarre new world where he spends every evening working with a mixed bunch of fellow drivers. A very mixed bunch, truth to tell!

And as for the strangers, sorry, I mean passengers, well, actually when you read the book you will see why I made that slip!

No two nights are ever the same and there's the little matter that, because of his new job, Andy gets to take a totally unexpected trip to Florida and the Caribbean.

It's a boom that is both amusing a very moving as Andy learns a lot more about life than he probably ever cared to know as he careers from one call out to another in his trusty Yellow Peril.

It's published by Matador at £9.99.