Friday, September 13, 2013

Recipe for Love by Katie Fforde




Hardback : 340 pages 
Genre: Contemporary Romantic Fiction 
Publisher: Century 2012
Source: Tywyn Public Library 
First Sentences: Zoe Harper lay on the bank in the sun with her eyes closed, listening to a lark high above her.

Review Quote"Deliciously enjoyable!" (Woman & Home)
My Opinion Once again Katie Fforde's writing met my expectations. 



I have been enjoying Katie Fforde's writing since 1995 and once again it met my expectations! When you want to read some Contemporary Romantic Fiction you can not go wrong if you pick one of her novels. She has a knack of producing simple romantic plots in very English settings that make for an absorbing and relaxing read.


In 'Recipe For Love' the story revolves around a reality television cookery show, very topical at the moment! The protagonist Zoe Harper wins a place on this show and is of course extremely excited about the opportunity to put her talents to good use. As the competition gets under way Zoe finds that she has inappropriate feelings for one of the judges, the gorgeous Gideon Irving. Suddenly there is a lot at stake as the plot becomes a little complicated with Zoe determined to win so she can open the delicatessen she has always dreamed of owning. As we follow the competition behind the scenes, Zoe makes friends and enemies along the way. 

I am not going to say more and spoil a delightful read just recommend it to Katie Ffforde fans and fans of the genre if you have not yet discovered this author, or you are enjoying the current TV reality programme about baking! Her novels are perfect for when you are in the mood for a touch of romance, presented in a readable novel with the inevitable happy ending that one can relax with. 

Katie Fforde talks about her novel Recipe for Love




Author Profile



Catherine Rose Gordon-Cumming was born on 27 September 1952 in Wimbledon, London, UK.  She has lived near Stroud, Gloucestershire  for over twenty years, with her husband and three children. It was after the birth of her third child that she started writing using her married name of Katie Fforde.  She is founder of the Katie Fforde Bursary for writers who have yet to secure a publishing contract. She was for many years a committee member of the Romantic Novelists' Association and was elected its twenty-fifteenth chairman (2009–2011) and later its fourth president. In June 2010 she was announced as a patron of the UK's first National Short Story Week.

I am also sharing here what she has to say about herself on her website as she says it so well.

About Katie
I was born and brought up in London but I am basically a country girl. I’ve lived in Stroud with my family for thirty years and while I love London and visit it frequently, I don’t think I could actually live there.

My husband Desmond and I started married life on the water, where we took two 70’ x 6’10 narrowboats around the canals as a hotel. It was very hard work! From there we went to Wales where we had two baby boys and narrowly avoided keeping goats. It was while we lived in Wales that I became addicted to Mills & Boon novels. My husband was away at sea for a lot of the time, leaving me with two small children who didn’t sleep well. I loved the fact that you could pick up a Mills & Boon and be able to follow the plot and enjoy the escapism even if you’d had little sleep. They were my reward for every household task. I’m so glad I was addicted to reading and not chocolate or Valium.

I did have the idea that I wanted to write Mills & Boon novels but didn’t do anything about it until my mother gave me a writing kit for Christmas. By now we lived in Stroud, and I also had a daughter as well as the two sons, Irish Wolfhound and two cats we had in Wales (although not the hens.). I didn’t think I had time to write but my mother thought differently and I took up the challenge. Ten years later I had a book on the shelves. It wasn’t a Mills & Boon, although I had tried to write one for eight years; it was Living Dangerously.

I had met an agent through the Romantic Novelists’Association and, when I was about to give up my ambitions to become a writer, she convinced me I could write something else. I was extremely lucky that the novel was chosen as part of a WHSmith’s Fresh Talent promotion, which gave it a terrific start in life.

There have been over seventeen novels since, as well as some grandchildren and a few stone of extra weight. However, I love being a writer. It gives me the chance to have all the jobs I couldn’t get now even if I did know anything about horses or pottery or indeed almost anything else. I love doing the research, although it has taken me way out of my comfort zone at times. I have been a porter for an auction house, learned how to gut fish, and taken part in a Ray Mears survival course. I loved it!

My hobbies, when I have time for them, are singing in a choir and flamenco dancing. Watching television is research and so I call it work.

Novels

  • Living Dangerously (1995)
  • The Rose Revived (1995)
  • Wild Designs (1996)
  • Stately Pursuits (1997)
  • Life Skills (1999)
  • Thyme Out (2000) aka Second Thyme Around
  • Artistic Licence (2001)
  • Highland Fling (2002)
  • Paradise Fields (2003)
  • Restoring Grace (2004)
  • Flora's Lot (2005) aka Bidding for Love
  • Practically Perfect (2006)
  • Going Dutch (2007)
  • Wedding Season (2008)
  • Love Letters (2009)
  • A Perfect Proposal (2010)
  • Summer of Love (2011)
  • Recipe for Love (2012)
  • A French Affair (2013)

The biographical information photo and video used in this post are with thanks to the following websites, where you can also find more information about the author and her writing.

Twitter Profile   Goodreads Author Profile  Katie Fforde - Official Website   Katie Fforde - Wikipedia




Wednesday, August 21, 2013

The Red House by Mark Haddon



Hardback: 264 pages
GenreContemporary Literary Fiction
Publisher:  Jonathan Cape 2012

Source:  Tywyn Library, Wales.
First Sentences: 'Cooling towers and sewage farms. Finstock, Charlbury, Ascott-under-Wychwood. Seventy miles per hour, the train unzips the fields.'

Favourite Quote: “You could ask for hugs if you were feeling sad or you'd hurt yourself, but when it happened spontaneously it made you feel warm inside.” 
Review Quote: "A hugely enjoyable, sympathetic novel...a tremendous pleasure...we have been absorbed, entertained and moved" (Kate Kellaway Observer )
My Opinion:The clipped style the novel is written in did not make for easy reading. 


It was indeed a captivating read but the clipped style the novel is written in did not make for easy reading, but once I got used to the style I became extremely involved with the characters. Eight of them in all with very complicated stories to tell painting a vivid picture of contemporary family life. The novel tells the story from all the characters viewpoints as the interconnecting relationships are explained and exposed one feels that you know the personalities as individuals so much more than they know each other. Not just do we learn of their worries, secrets and desires but little personal details such as what they are reading, or music they are listening to, which although it adds to the narrative it can make it feel disjointed at times.  I certainly needed to concentrate reading this one but it was worthwhile.

The story takes place over a week in a holiday home in the Welsh countryside where two families gather together. After the death of his mother, Richard has decided to make an effort with his estranged sister Angela and invited their respective families to spend some time together. As mentioned before there are eight characters to get to know, Richard a successful doctor has recently got married to Louisa and gained a strong willed teenage step daughter, Melissa in the process, which makes three of them. His sister Angela is married to Dominic and their three children teenagers Alex and Daisy, plus a younger son Benjy make the eight protagonists.
It is then the fun begins as like many family gatherings all over the world a week in close confinement brings out the animosity in them all.
In conclusion a deceptively simple idea that makes for an ingenious novel about family dysfunction in modern society that will appeal to many, but do not expect a happy ending.


Author  Profile



Mark Haddon was born on   September 26, 1962, he is an author, illustrator and screenwriter who has written fifteen books for children and won two BAFTAs. Educated at Merton College, Oxford, Uppingham School, University of Edinburgh and the University of Oxford.  At Oxford he studied English after which, he was employed in several different occupations. One included working with people with disabilities, and another included creating illustrations and cartoons for magazines and newspapers. He lived in Boston, Massachusetts for a year with his wife until they moved back to England. Then, Mark took up painting and selling abstract art. In 1987, Haddon wrote his first children’s book, Gilbert’s Gobstopper. This was followed by many other children’s books, which were often self-illustrated. 
It was not until 2003 that his best selling novel The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, was  published,  it won seventeen literary prizes, including the Whitbread Award. His poetry collection, The Talking Horse and the Sad Girl and the Village Under the Sea, was published by Picador in 2005, and his last novel, The Red House, was published by Jonathan Cape in 2012. He lives in Oxford with his wife Dr Sos Eltis  a Fellow and Tutor in English of Brasenose College, Oxford.

The link below is to a very interesting BBC Interview with the author.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-18111459


The biographical information and photo used in this post are with thanks to the following websites, where you can also find more information about the author and his writing. 


Monday, August 5, 2013

The Story of Beautiful Girl by Rachel Simon


Paperback: 346 pages
GenreLiterary Fiction
Publisher:  Preface Publishing 2011

Source:  Tywyn Library, Wales.
First Sentences: 'At the end of the night that would change everything, the widow stood on her porch and watched as the young woman was marched down her front drive and shoved into the sedan.'

Favourite Quote: “How many other lives are hidden, and hearts are seeking? How many would give anything in the world to be held by the person they love?” 

Review Quote: "Combines love story and social accountability to great effect"--The Guardian
My Opinion:  Emotionally draining but an excellent read.


This emotionally draining but an excellent read was written due to the author's true life experiences as the sibling of someone with disabilities. She first heard about institutions like the one that features in the novel when she heard her parents discussing such places and how they would never ever have their daughter admitted to one. Her sister Beth was raised at home and the message they grew up with was that children that were put away in such institutions were never really loved by their families. Years later in the early seventies as Rachel Simon was entering adolescence she saw a news report on television that drew her attention and the rest of the USA to just how horrendous these places were. It was not until twenty seven years later when publicising a book she had written about her life with Beth, 'Riding The Bus With My Sister' that she began to learn much more about these institutions. She did this by carrying out research talking to people who had stories to tell her and reading up on a subject that very little was written about due to the fact it was a sordid political secret. One particular true story published as a book entitled God Knows His Name  gave her the inspiration to write this novel, although for a long while she held off unsure if she could do justice to those that suffered in such places.  Well personally I think she has carried her tribute off extremely well and given a voice to those residents of such places in this moving novel.

A moving love story about the improbable odds faced by Lynnie and Homan, a couple with disabilities, when one stormy night just after Lynnie has given birth they knock on a stranger's door. That stranger is Martha Zimmer a retired school teacher who gives up her conventional lifestyle to do something very special by taking in the baby and saving her from life in an institution. This is how the novel starts and reading it takes you across forty years as Martha carries the secret of baby Julia with her as her life progresses. The interwoven stories of the four protagonists tell of love under impossible conditions, how to do the right thing and never give up hope by continuing to believe it will all turn out right when you are the only one that believes this. 
It is truly terrible that places like 'The School for the Incurable and Feebleminded' were even in existence at this time. Or any time in fact, but sadly they were and it is quite an experience to read about the shocking brutality that took place in them, even the name of the institution was I found upsetting. However the ending did surprise me but then this is a love story, my conclusion then is that this is a powerful story that I can recommend to anyone that feels they can cope with such sadness in a novel.


Rachel Simon introduces "The Story of Beautiful Girl"



Author Profile


Rachel Simon was born in New Jersey and spent most of her first sixteen years in the New Jersey towns of Newark, Millburn, Irvington, and Succasunna. During that time, she began writing short stories and novels, which she shared widely with friends and teachers but never submitted to editors. When Rachel was eight, her parents split up. She and her three siblings remained with their mother for eight years, and then moved to Easton, Pennsylvania to live with their father, with Rachel also becoming a boarding student at Solebury School in New Hope, PA. Rachel studied anthropology at Bryn Mawr College and graduated in 1981. She then moved to the Philadelphia area and worked at a variety of jobs, including supervisor of researchers for a television study at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania. She earned an MFA in Creative Writing from Sarah Lawrence College in 1988. Just before graduating, she won the Writers At Work short story contest, and when she attended the Writers At Work conference that June in Park City, Utah, she decided to be more courageous than she’d been as a teenager. She brought multiple copies of a collection of short stories, Little Nightmares, Little Dreams, that she’d just completed and handed them to every agent and editor who was interested. An editor from Houghton Mifflin bought the manuscript six weeks later and published it to critical acclaim in 1990.
Since then she has become an award-winning author of six books and a nationally-recognized public speaker on issues related to diversity and disability. Her titles include the bestsellers, The Story of Beautiful Girl and Riding The Bus with My Sister. Both books are frequent selections of book clubs and school reading programs around the country. Rachel's work has been adapted for theater, NPR, the Lifetime Channel, and Hallmark Hall of Fame, whose adaptation of Riding The Bus With My Sister starred Rosie O' Donnell and Andie McDowell, and was directed by Anjelica Huston. Her awards include The Secretary Tommy G. Thompson Recognition Award for Contributions to the Field of Disability from the U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, and creative writing fellowships from the Delaware Division of the Arts, the Pennsylvania Council of the Arts, and the Ludwig Vogelstein Foundation.  Rachel Simon lives in Wilmington, Delaware with her architect husband.

The biographical information and photo used in this post are with thanks to the following websites, where you can also find more information about the author and her writing. 

Goodreads Author Profile   YouTube   Rachel Simon - Official Author Website    Wikipedia - Rachel Simon

Thursday, July 25, 2013

The Casual Vacancy by J.K.Rowling



Hardback: 503 pages
Genre: Literary Fiction
Publisher:
 Little Brown
Source: Tywyn Library, Wales.
First Sentences: Barry Fairbrother did not want to go out to dinner. He had endured a thumping headache for most of the weekend and was struggling to make a deadline for the local newspaper.

Review Quote:  
A needle-sharp and darkly comic expose of today's class-ridden society . . . A highly readable morality tale for our times (Emma Lee-Potter, Daily Express )

Favourite Quote: “She navigated away from the Parish Council message board and dropped into her favorite medical website, where she painstakingly entered the words "brain" and "death" in the search box. The suggestions were endless. Shirley scrolled through the possibilities, her mild eyes rolling up and down, wondering to which of these deadly conditions, some of them unpronounceable, she owed her present happiness.” 
Literary Awards: Goodreads Choice Award for Best Fiction (2012)
My Opinion: Sadly probably pretty near the mark when it comes to home truths about society today! 

It was a relief to know that J.K. Rowling decided to to write a completely different kind of novel after her success with Harry Potter. Her first venture into the adult market has proved that she can write and entertain us in the real world as well as fantasy. I am actually not sure if I would have chosen to read this novel from the blurb had it been by an unknown author, but because it was written by J.K Rowling that was a different matter. She has always claimed that she uses real people as the basis of stories and this comes across with totally believable characters in  'The Casual Vacancy' which is an interesting bird's eye look into life in a small town in the UK, sadly probably pretty near the mark when it comes to home truths about society today! I was not surprised to read that the BBC are already planning an adaptation of the novel for television, where its realistic drama will come across well. The character development is excellent but the plot is purposely slow so it takes time and patience in your reading as you need to get to know the individuals personalities in this character driven novel. 

The cast of characters is indeed long but then this is a story about an entire community and how the death of Barry Fairbrother, local councillor relates to the problems, personalities and politics of the different individuals. Everyone seems to be at war with someone highlighting the prejudices that truly exist in small towns all over the country.  Set in the fictional village of Pagford,  the story hinges on a council election, the outcome of which will decide whether a whether a council estate called the Fields remains part of the village or becomes part of a neighbouring town. Rich versus poor, teenagers versus parents, married couples versus each other and teachers versus pupils. There is indeed plenty of anguish to keep you entertained in this 503 page novel as the inhabitants of Pagford face up to each other over this Casual Vacancy. Be warned though that there are not many light moments, there is lots of bad language and no happy ending, so in conclusion another great read from J.K. Rowling but definitely for older readers. 


A very interesting article was recently published in The New Statesmen in defence of the novel.

J.K.Rowling interview where she reads first paragraph. (No spoilers)


Author Profile




J.K. Rowling (Joanne “Jo” Rowling) was born in  in Yate, South Gloucestershire, England, on July 31, 1965 and  grew up in Chepstow, Gwent.  Jo left Chepstow for Exeter University, where she earned a French and Classics degree, her course including one year in Paris. As a postgraduate she moved to London and worked as a researcher at Amnesty International among other jobs. She started writing the Harry Potter series during a delayed Manchester to London King’s Cross train journey, and during the next five years, outlined the plots for each book and began writing the first novel of the best selling Harry Potter series. The series gained worldwide attention, won multiple awards, sold more than 400 million copies and has been the basis for a popular series of films.  Equally famous for her “rags to riches” life story, in which she progressed from living on benefits to multi-millionaire status within five years. The 2008 Sunday Times Rich List estimated her fortune at £560 million, ranking her as the twelfth richest woman in Britain. She has become a notable philanthropist, supporting such charities as Comic Relief, One Parent Families, Multiple Sclerosis Society of Great Britain, and the Children’s High Level Group. Rowling’s mother died of multiple sclerosis, and because of this she became severely depressed for a period of time.  In 2012, her  first novel for adults The Casual Vacancy was published. It won the Goodreads Choice Award for Best Fiction. She now lives in Edinburgh with her husband and three children. Her full biography and details of her previous books can be found on her official website here.


The biographical information and photo used in this post are with thanks to the following websites, where you can also find more information about the author and her writing. 


Goodreads Author Profile       J.K.Rowling - Official Author Website   BBC Announcement 


 New Statesman  YouTube Video