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SHOW ME YOUR SHELVES


Today I had a sort of some of my books and thought I would share with you a little peek of what my study is looking like. In the process, I managed to gather together a few books that need a new home too, which I shall post about tomorrow.


Did you see how they're alphabetised? And divided into fiction and non fiction?! Swanky, eh?

Best bit of the pic is Rikku's tail though. She was actually trying to eat one of my notebooks at that point. Grrr...

I showed you mine, so it's time to show me yours! [giggety] Post a pic of your shelves and link to it in the comments! It'll be fun to be nosy! 

 If you need a tip on how to embed links into the comment, look here

Lx

And the winners are...

I recently hosted a giveaway offering the chance to win a copy on Entangled, by Cat Clarke. The response was amazing! I'm really pleased that a couple more people will be reading this awesome book!

I offered 2 prizes, one for a randomly chosen entrant, another for whoever submitted my favourite joke. Both of these winners will have a copy of Entangled, by Cat Clarke, sent their way! I was going to give the joke winner a runner-up prize, but decided to just go ahead and give another book away. Ain't I lovely?

So! The randomly chosen winner (thanks to random.org) is...


Yayyyyyyyyyyy!



And the winner of the joke competition is...


Yayyyyyyyyyyy!


Here is Saskia's joke. I didn't chose it to be sexist or because I'm a man-hater. I chose it because it made me laugh. LOTS!

In the Hospital the relatives gathered in the waiting room, where their family member lay gravely ill. Finally, the doctor came in looking tired and somber.

"I'm afraid I am the bearer of bad news," he said as he surveyed the worried faces, "The only hope left for your loved one at this time is a brain transplant. It's an experimental procedure, semi-risky, and you will have to pay for the brain yourselves."

The family members sat silent as they absorbed the news. After a length of time, someone asked, "Well, how much does a brain cost?" The Doctor quickly responded, "$5000 for a male brain, and $200 for a female brain."

The moment turned awkward. Men in the room tried not to smile, avoiding eye contact with the women, but some actually smirked. A man, unable to control his curiosity, blurted out the question everyone wanted to ask, "Why is the male brain so much more?"

The doctor smiled at the childish innocence and then to the entire group said, "It's just standard pricing procedure. We have to mark down the price of the female brains, because they've been used."

Thanks to everyone who entered! I shall be hosting more competitions soon!

Lx

[Winners have been notified by email.]

The Hunger Games Trailer

Look! A trailer for the Hunger Games Movie! Happy Squee!


...and the squee falls silent.

Was anyone else left feeling kind of "meh" after watching this? I do feel less put off by the casting choices as they all seem to have the right sort of look, but other than that the trailer hasn't exactly amped up my excitement. Let's hope the next sneak peek is a bit less disappointing, eh?

What are your thoughts? 

Lx

Roll up! Roll up!

The Book Angel Bookthong

So! After a whole bunch of Twitter-shaped encouragement where some lovely people said such nice things, I've decided to start my own Etsy store! Woop! On this site I'll be selling earrings, books thongs and various other pretty creations, handmade by me! 

The above bookthong, which I've dubbed The Book Angel, is going out to Emma of Book Angel Booktopia as she is the one who started whoring my products on Twitter, without asking first! She is my craft pimp, I guess. She's also getting three for her three girls too!


Thanks for the encouragement, Emma! Now go and tell your friends!

That goes for the rest of you too. I'd really REALLY appreciate it if you'd share my link with all your Twitter, Facebook, Blogger and Imaginary buddies. A button will also be appearing on the sidebar of this 'ere blog so that you can either brows or share.

 My shop can be found HERE

Go visit! Go visit NOW!

Lx



I'm telling the world that I'm freakin' hilarious...and giving stuff away! Woop!

It's official. I'm a funny bugger. Cat Clarke said so on her very own blog! Look here

In order to celebrate the fact that a real life author thinks I'm funny, I'm going to have me an international giveaway! All you have to do is fill out the form below to win yourself a copy of Entangled, by Cat Clarke. I adored this book. as you can see in my review of it, here.  

The Rules.

This is an INTERNATIONAL giveaway, open to anywhere that The Book Depository ships to.

Due to the content of the book, the contest is open to entrants ages 13+ only. 

Contest ends at midnight (GMT) ON August 30th and I shall announce the winner of the book the following day.

You need to be a follower!

To enter, simply fill in THIS FORM

Good luck to all of you!

Lx

REVIEW: "In Praise of Savagery", by Warwick Cairns


Format: Paperback, sent to me by Publisher for an honest review
Pages: 256 
Published April 28th 2011 (first published October 28th 2010)  
Publisher: The Friday Project Limited 

Synopsis
Taken from Goodreads

One man's journey in the footsteps of a great explorer into the heart of Africa. As a young man, Warwick Cairns met the then elderly explorer Wilfred Thesiger and the two men struck up an unlikely friendship. Invited to visit him at his African home, Cairns decides to make a bit of an adventure of it and do some of the journey on foot. When he himself was a young man, Thesiger led an expedition to explore the course of the Awash river in Ethiopia. Every westerner that had gone before him had been killed by local tribesmen. Needless to say, he survived. Alternating chapters chart Warwick's journey with that of Thesiger creating a captivating dual narrative that is part travel book, part biography, part autobiography, part history with fair doses of philosophy and humour thrown in for good measure. In Praise of Savagery is a highly original book that defies classification but is always effortlessly readable.

Review

This is where I end up sounding like a dumbo who has no appreciation for serious texts. I really struggled with In Praise of Savagery. I was interested by the premise, I enjoyed some of the tongue-in-cheek prose which ridiculed the voice of the text while almost underscoring the more serious messages of the book. The strange idea behind the text shouldn't have worked on paper, but they did. But... not for me. 

You know what? There are two reasons that I struggled with this book.

1) Post Colonial Literature
2)Colonialism and the Masculine

Two university courses which I remember fondly, but also with still-painful memories of essays and assignments. Maybe this sort of literature is just too much like "homework" for me now? I hope not. 

The book is a strange mixture of travelogue and biographical memoir which journeys through the Africa that once was, and the Africa that is. Thesiger's journey of old Africa was much more interesting to me as the modern author's journey just couldn't live up to the bright and savage excitement of Thesiger's story. Indeed, reading about Wilfred Thesiger's adventured reminded me of the sort of excitement I used to love in Wilbur Smith novels. 

This book has pace, excitement and a use of language which is almost melodic at times. So there was nothing wrong with the actual writing... The only reason that it wasn't for me is that it just wasn't my cup of tea. All because two university courses has killed this genre for me...for now at least. 

So, how to rate it? I would recommend this book to others who have an interest in travelogue, memoir and colonialism. There is depth and meaning behind the parallel journeys in this text and its messages are important. Therefore, despite the facet that this book wasn't "for me", I can't justify a low star rating. Like the coward that I am I shall give this book...


Lx

REVIEW: "Torn", by Cat Clarke.

Format: ARC Paperback (won from Cat Clarke's website. It is the very first ARC. This makes me swell with happiness!)
Pages: 378 
Expected Publication: January 5th 2012 
Published By: Quercus 

Marketed at 12+

Synopsis
Taken from Goodreads

Four girls. One dead body. A whole lot of guilt. 







Alice King isn’t expecting the holiday of a lifetime when she sets off with her classmates on a trip to the Scottish wilderness, but she’s not exactly prepared for an experience beyond her darkest nightmares… Alice and her best friend Cass are stuck in a cabin with Polly, the social outcast, and Rae, the moody emo-girl. Then there’s Tara – queen of mean. Powerful, beautiful and cruel, she likes nothing better than putting people down. Cass decides it’s time to teach Tara a lesson she’ll never forget. And so begins a series of events that will change the lives of these girls forever... A compelling story of guilty secrets, troubled friendship and burgeoning 
love.

Review

Okay, Cat Clarke. I don't know whether to fall at your feet and worship you, or hunt you down and punch you in the face! But to explain why I'm feeling so torn (he he... that was unintentional but see what I did there?) would be very spoilerific. So let's get back to the whole reviewing part of this review. 

I read and reviewed Clarke's first book, Entangled, a short while back. You can read my gushy praise of that incredible book here. I adored it. I adored it so much I gave it five stars (after a brief hostage situation with one of the stars anyway... For the record, Cat Clarke does not negotiate with blogorrists!). So, when I saw that Clarke was having a little competition on her blog and the prize would be the very first ARC of Torn, I had to enter.  

As luck would have it, I won! I did a proper little happy dance around my kitchen when I found out (though it seems half of Twitter knew before I did, as it was through them that I heard the good news) and proceeded to sit by my mailbox and await my delivery. It arrived and I squeeled a li'l bit.  

Then life, as it does, got in the way for a little while. You know how it is. Shit happens and sometimes the rug get whipped out from under our feet. Have I ever mentioned that I have the ugliest feet in the universe? But anyway... After I got the rug back in place beneath my hooves and nailed it down for good measure, I finally got around to reading Torn this afternoon. I finished it about ten minutes ago and just had to review it as soon as I possibly could. But how to do this without spoiling the ride for the rest of you?! 

Let me begin by saying this: Cat Clarke is the best author of YA I have read this year. In Torn, just like in Entangled, she creates characters who you will recognise. I could see aspects of Alice in myself. The way she remembers fishing for parental compliments after parents' evenings. The way she gets annoyed if someone uses more than three dots in an ellipsis. But it wasn't just the protagonist that was painted with these evocative hues of realism. 
- The "queen bee-atch", Tara, and the best-buddy Cass, both reminded me of times when my tongue was, perhaps, a little too sharp. 
- The adorable Jack had trouble expressing the emotions most important to him in just the same verbally-vomiting way that I do. 
- Emo, music-obsessed and antisocial Rae had a few familiar traits.
- But most of all, Alice's English teacher, Daley, reminds me a lot of me! A fairly newbie teacher who wants to save her pupils and who hopefully, remembers school well enough to see through the charades that the young-uns like to put on. 

Cat Clarke is really good at creating flawed characters. I don't just mean the trivial flaws that are often prevalent in YA, (you know what I mean: "My hair is too frizzy...", "My boobs are too small", "I'm a social outcast..."). No no no. Clarke goes for the big flaws which are far more real. She creates characters who act in all the wrong and improper ways when faced with drama and calamity. They fu...dge up. They don't just mess up because it's good for the story, or because it adds necessary conflict. Her characters mess up in all the ways that real people mess up. We chicken out. We swear and get horny. We act selfishly. We hurt people to console ourselves. We bitch. We get jealous. We lie. 

We do all of these things and yet whenever we read a story, don't we see ourselves as the hero? Despite all our own flaws, we all want to be the one to save the Nakatomi Towers, or defeat the Alien, or take on the Terminators. Clarke gives us protagonists who sometimes do bad things but who also want their "Yippy-ki-yay-Get-away-from-her-you-bitch-Come-with-me-if-you-want-to-live" moment. This, to me, is real and it therefore makes me really care about and empathise with her characters. 

Which is great. Except Cat Clarke likes her realistic narratives so much that sometimes she has to go and put her characters in painful and impossible situations. She hurts them and, through her razor sharp prose, cuts us too! Deeply. 

So darn you, Cat Clarke! You've made me cry for the second time, and for that I kind of want to throttle you and beg you to take it easy on your poor protagonists. At the same time, you've made damn sure that I will go out and buy every single book you ever write, because you're bloody terrific! Ours is to be a love-hate relationship, I think! He he he. 

Lx


In My Mailbox #10


In My Mailbox (IMM) is a weekly feature organised by The Story Siren. IMM is a post where you can show which books entered your house and it also gives you a chance to say thank you to the people that kindly sent them. To find out more about how you can join in, click here.


The Magnificent 12: The Trap, by Michael Grant 

I love Grant's Gone series and am extremely interested in his transmedia BZRK experience. When I found out one of his works was free on kindle, I had to get it! 

In the thrilling second book of the Magnificent 12 series, Mack MacAvoy is challenged by his spectral mentor, Grimluk—who only appears in the shiny chrome pipes of bathrooms.
Mack must find the ancient ones, the great forgotten forces. Some will help; some not so much. But above all...

Learn the ways of Vargran!
Assemble the twelve! 
Go to the nine dragons of Daidu. 
Go to the Egge rocks. 
Beware of . . . the trap.

Time is short! The wicked Pale Queen’s three-thousand-year banishment ends in thirty-five days, and she will be free to destroy the world. It’s up to Mack to stop her return. But what do all of Grimluk’s clues mean? Can Mack achieve everything he must do without getting killed by the evil Risky—and escape the trap?

The Magnificent 12: The Trap is another fast-paced episode in bestselling author Michael Grant’s hilarious fantasy-adventure series.


Raven, by Suzy Turner


After the inexplicable disappearance of Lilly Taylor's parents, she has no choice but to move to Canada where she unravels some frightening yet intriguing family secrets...

Raven is a fantasy novel for children and young adults set in the beautiful province of British Columbia.


Graveminder, by Melissa Marr 



Melissa Marr is known to young adult readers as the author of the popular faery series Wicked Lovely. Her debut leap into adult fiction lands her in the small community of Claysville, a town where the dead walk free unless there their graves are not properly tended. Into this eerie maelstrom, Rebekkah Barrow descends as she returns to a place that she once believed she knew. Kelley Armstrong justly described Graveminder as "a deliciously creepy tale that is as skillfully wrought as it is spellbindingly imagined." A new genre author to watch.


I also must have had some lucky dust sprinkled on mew this week as I won a $25 Amazon Giftcard from the lovely Birgit it The Book Garden. She hosted the giveaway to celebrate reaching the 500 follower milestone! Her blog is awesome. Check her out! 

Hope you all had great mailboxes too!

Lx

And the winner is...

There were some great suggestions to my predicament! In the end I decided I'd have to use Random.org to choose a winner! That lucky so-and-so is Jade, from Ink Scratchers. She has chosen Wildfire, by Karsten Knight as her prize! 

All of your suggestions brought death to the gummi bears which were trying to chew my brain. And you know what happens when you type "death of a gummi bear" into google? You get this video!


As for the other lucky thirteen people who replied to my post, I've been trying my hand at creating book thongs (they're like bookmarks only cuter)! If you email me (see my contact info page) your addy and your favourite colours, then I shall send you one in the mail. Just because I'm feeling nice!

Enjoy the rest of your weekend!

Lx

Showing off my recent love of Upcycling.

Upcycling. It's kind of like recycling except you make stuff better and more useful. For someone who always forgets which week is recycling week, I'm in love with upcycling. 

I made this bag out of 2 old T-shirts, 4 curtain hoops, 1 piece of vinyl material stuff and a scarf. Oh, and I made the broach out of a scrap of felt and a top which didn't fit any more. I'm rather pleased with it and wanted to show you! I know I know...I'm like a kid showing a colouring-in to their mum and aching for praise. So this is where you smile, pat me on the head, tell me you're pleased with my efforts while laughing at my craptastic attempts deep down inside. He he he. 




Well I like it. And it holds so. many. books!

Lx

Femme Fatale Jewellery

Okay, so I completely just had to share this with you. Anyone who has ever had a bit of a thing for steampunk, or any woman who wishes she was just a little more kick ass, will love this. 

Introducing, the Gun Ring!!! (And I rarely break the rules of exclamation mark usage).

Femme Fatale Ring Gun with Ammuntion and Screwdriver

I know, right?! A ring which doubles as a gun! It even has teeny tiny bullets!

Ring Gun with Ammuntion and Screwdriver

Is it wrong for me to love this? Is it weird that I even think it's cute? 

There's even a "Femme Fatale" inscription on the back!

Ring Gun

I've seen a few of these around the internet now. For this, and more manly versions, have a look here.

Seriously, who else wants one of these from Santa? He he he.

Lx

My brain feels mushy... mini-giveaway!


I've not posted anything in over a week and for this I feel I need to apologise. The above image is my explanation for the lack of postage. I don't literally think there are Gummi Bears chewing on my brain...but something certainly seems to have taken a chomp out of it! I'm having one of those weeks were my focus is frazzled, my concentration is kaput, and my alliteration is alarming. Okay...so that last one was technically assonance, but who cares, right?

I have options. I could craft something. I could review. I could read. I could play a game. I could write. I should write! I could watch a movie. I could take Rikku for another walk. I could clean my house. I definitely should clean my house... I could do one of a million things. Maybe it's all the choice that's making is so difficult to relax? Because I have so many options and, by nature, suck at making decisions, I inevitably decide to have a nap or something lame instead! 

So, instead of posting one of the bazillion reviews that I should be writing, I thought I'd ask you all a question!  What to you do when you feel like you can't quite settle to do anything? Any sage advice or witty wisdom? How do I get these damned gummi bears out of my brain?!

Whoever posts my favourite piece of advice will receive a book from their wishlist! So get thinking!

Lx

[P.S. I'll announce the winner at midday on Sunday, GMT]

Top Ten Tuesdays #6 - Underrated Reads


Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by the lovelies at The Broke and the Bookish. 

This week’s Top Ten theme is: TOP TEN UNDERRATED BOOKS


I approached this week's theme thinking it would be a hell of a challenge. After all, some people might think of a book as underrated or lacking deserved attention, while others think it's a popular classic. Or perhaps some people think that certain books are given less regard because they deserve less regard! 

So. Subjectively thinking, here are a few books/series which I just feel like I don't hear enough about. As always, they're in no particular order. Oh, and all of the synopses are from the fabness that is Goodreads. 

1. The Chaos Walking Series, by Patrick Ness

Cover and Blurb of Book One: The Knife Of Never Letting Go



Prentisstown isn't like other towns. Everyone can hear everyone else's thoughts in an overwhelming, never-ending stream of Noise. Just a month away from the birthday that will make him a man, Todd and his dog, Manchee -- whose thoughts Todd can hear too, whether he wants to or not -- stumble upon an area of complete silence. They find that in a town where privacy is impossible, something terrible has been hidden -- a secret so awful that Todd and Manchee must run for their lives. 


But how do you escape when your pursuers can hear your every thought?

I adore these books. They are supremely inventive. I felt such empathy for all of the characters and thought Ness' writing was just astounding. These should be on everyone's bookshelves. 

2. Unforgettable, by Caroline B Cooney

Losing her entire memory after witnessing a terrible crime, Hope cannot accept her luxurious life or the man who claims to be her father and finds solace in Mitch McKenna, a college student who may solve her mystery.

When I was a kid, I once got so sunburned reading this in my back garden that I could barely move for a week! I had a bit of a thing for the Point books when I was younger. I used to devour them whole and I feel like the stories are an integral part of my teen years. This one will always stick with me as a perfect summer read. 



3. The Host, by Stephenie Meyer


Melanie Stryder refuses to fade away. Our world has been invaded by an unseen enemy. Humans become hosts for these invaders, their minds taken over while their bodies remain intact and continue their lives apparently unchanged. Most of humanity has succumbed. 


When Melanie, one of the few remaining "wild" humans, is captured, she is certain it is her end. Wanderer, the invading "soul" who has been given Melanie's body, was warned about the challenges of living inside a human: the overwhelming emotions, the glut of senses, the too-vivid memories. But there was one difficulty Wanderer didn't expect: the former tenant of her body refusing to relinquish possession of her mind. Wanderer probes Melanie's thoughts, hoping to discover the whereabouts of the remaining human resistance. Instead, Melanie fills Wanderer's mind with visions of the man Melanie loves - Jared, a human who still lives in hiding. Unable to separate herself from her body's desires, Wanderer begins to yearn for a man she has been tasked with exposing. When outside forces make Wanderer and Melanie unwilling allies, they set off on a dangerous and uncertain search for the man they both love.


This one has been out for a while but I'm going to post a review of it this week as I think it is such a brilliant book! I love the Twilight books (judge me as you like, but the books were fab. Admittedly the films kinda suck though...), but The Host just leaves them in the dust. Whereas Twilight et al were written with a specific YA audience in mind, The Host was placed on adult fiction bookshelves. I won't go in to too much depth here lest it render my review redundant, but I will say that I cannot wait for this movie...if only they'd hurry the hell up with it!

4. Monsoon, by Wilbur Smith

Before there was empire, there was trade, and military force to protect that trade. Wilbur Smith's new, full-blooded historical novel starts with the commissioning, by King William III of Sir Hal Franklin. Franklin's mission is to rid the Indian Ocean of the pirate known as al-Aouf, the Bad One, and tells us more than we knew about the East India trade, Channel smuggling, the Arab slave trade and the struggle to keep Oman free from the Ottoman Empire.

Oh dear lord, that blurb is sort of dire, isn't it? Makes it sound so. very. boring! This book is anything but boring. It's a swashbuckling adventure filled with action, romance, the high seas and the oh-so-dashing Tom Courtney (*swoon*). It's an amazing read which nobody else seems to have read whenever I mention it. It IS a bestseller, but god knows who else bought it...nobody I know, that's for darn sure. 

5. The Well of Echoes Series, by Ian Irvine

Cover and Blurb of Book One: Geomancer

Two hundred years after the Forbidding was broken, Santhenar is locked in war with the lyrinx - intelligent, winged predators who will do anything to gain their own world. Despite the development of battle clankers and mastery of the crystals that power them, humanity is losing. Tiaan, a lonely crystal worker in a clanker manufactory, is experimenting with an entirely new kind of crystal when she begins to have extraordinary visions. The crystal has woken her latent talent for geomancy, the most powerful of all the Secret Arts - and the most perilous. Falsely accused of sabotage by her rival, Irisis, Tiaan flees for her life. Struggling to control her talent and hunted by the lyrinx, Tiaan follows her visions all the way to Tirthrax, greatest peak on all the Three Worlds, where a nightmare awaits her. 

This series held me completely mesmerised from start to finish. Ian Irvine sure doesn't pull any punches with his narrative. He creates a world of vivid detail and characters which are so fully-fleshed that you wince when they bleed. Which the often do. 

6. The Black Magician Trilogy, by Trudi Canavan


Cover and Blurb of Book One: Magician's Guild

"We should expect this young woman to be more powerful than our average novice, possibly even more powerful than the average magician."

This year, like every other, the magicians of Imardin gather to purge the city of undesirables. Cloaked in the protection of their sorcery, they move with no fear of the vagrants and miscreants who despise them and their work—until one enraged girl, barely more than a child, hurls a stone at the hated invaders . . . and effortlessly penetrates their magical shield.

What the Magicians' Guild has long dreaded has finally come to pass. There is someone outside their ranks who possesses a raw power beyond imagining, an untrained mage who must be found and schooled before she destroys herself and her city with a force she cannot yet control.

I read this while I was working in Borders, several years ago. I remember devouring the books on my lunch breaks as they were flying off the shelves at the time! These days, their popularity seems to have fizzled somewhat. This is a shame as the trilogy was so enjoyable!


7. The Invention of Hugo Cabret, by Brian Selznick

Orphan Hugo Cabret lives in a wall. His secret home is etched out in the crevices of a busy Paris train station. Part-time clock keeper, part-time thief, he leads a life of quiet routine until he gets involved with an eccentric, bookish young girl and an angry old man who runs a toy booth in the station. The Invention of Hugo Cabret unfolds its cryptic, magical story in a format that blends elements of picture book, novel, graphic novel, and film. Caldecott Honor-winning author-illustrator Brian Selznick has fashioned an intricate puzzle story that binds the reader like a mesmerist's spell.

This book was described to me as a silent movie on paper. There is something magical and entrancing about how this story plays out through beautiful artistry and only the bare minimum of text. I wish that more people would groan wistfully and look into the distance, as though remembering a vivid dream, whenever I mentioned this book. That's the effect it has on me. 

8. A Note of Madness - Tabitha Suzuma

Life as a student is good for Flynn. As one of the top pianists at the Royal College of Music, he has been put forward for an important concert, the opportunity of a lifetime. But beneath the surface, things are changing. On a good day, he feels full of energy and life, but on a bad day being alive is worse than being dead. Sometimes he wants to compose and practise all night, at other times he can't get out of bed. His flatmate Harry tries to understand but is increasingly confused by Flynn's erratic mood swings. His friend Jennah tries to help, but Flynn finds it difficult to be around her as he struggles to control his feelings and behaviour. With the pressure of the forthcoming concert and the growing concern of his family and friends, emotions come to a head. Sometimes things can only get worse before they get better.

A bloody brilliant book from a bloody brilliant author. Suzuma's latest book, Forbidden has enough controversy surrounding it that I believe it will push her to the very forefront of contemporary YA literature. She thoroughly deserves to be there!

9. Spud, by John van de Ruit


It’s 1990. Apartheid is crumbling. Nelson Mandela has just been released from prison. And Spud Milton—thirteen-year-old, prepubescent choirboy extraordinaire—is about to start his first year at an elite boys-only boarding school in South Africa. Cursed with embarrassingly dysfunctional parents, a senile granny named Wombat, and a wild obsession for Julia Roberts, Spud has his hands full trying to adapt to his new home.


Armed with only his wits and his diary, Spud takes readers of all ages on a rowdy boarding school romp full of illegal midnight swims, raging hormones, and catastrophic holidays that will leave the entire family in total hysterics and thirsty for more.

This book is seriously pee-in-your-pants funny! I read a proof copy of this back in those Borders days and I remember having to find a handkerchief at one point because I was literally crying with laughter. This is also a tremendous read for your reluctant boy readers!


10. Doll, by Nicky Singer 

A story of dark emotions and strange friendship, Doll is the eagerly awaited new title from Nicky Singer, following the triumph of her first children's book, Feather Boy. Tilly's biker mother gave Tilly a doll when she was on her deathbed. There is something strange about the doll, something dangerous -- something which brings Tilly into the path of Jan, a South American boy with his own problems. But there are questions that have not been answered. Is Tilly's mother really dead, or is there a more painful reason for her absence?

This is one of those books which needs to be described as literature. There were a few negative reviews on Goodreads, but a lot of them said things along the lines of "it was too complicated." There's a lot going on in the dark currents of this short read. You can read my five star review of Doll, here

So that's it! But Wait...there's more!

I initially thought I was going to have a lot of trouble with this one so I asked around the family. Here are the suggestions I was given.

My husband, Nick, recommends A Lion's Tale: Around the World in Spandex by Chris Jericho

A New York Times bestseller, WWE World Champion Chris Jericho's autobiography charts his path from small-town Canadian kid to big time World Wrestling Federation star.

Chris is the first undisputed Heavyweight Champion of the WWE and WCW, and has been named one of the fifty greatest wrestlers of all time. In A Lion's Tale, he dishes the dirt on how he worked his way through the ranks alongside major wrestling stars like Lance Storm to become a major superstar.


I haven't read this one but Nick has...about a dozen times. I dipped into it the other day and think I might give it a go. It was really well written and the bit I read cracked me up.

My mum, Sheila, recommends:

The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, aged 13 3/4, by Sue Townsend.

At thirteen years old, Adrian Mole has more than his fair share of problems - spots, ill-health, parents threatening to divorce, rejection of his poetry and much more - all recorded with brilliant humour in his diary.

I recommend this one, but I preferred Spud really. My mum recommends it as she thinks the younger generation are missing out on it.





Anne Frank: The Diary of A Young Girl


The Diary of a Young Girl is the record of two years in the life of a remarkable Jewish girl whose triumphant humanity in the face of unfathomable deprivation and fear has made the book one of the most enduring documents of our time.

The Everyman’s hardcover edition reprints the Definitive Edition authorized by the Frank estate, plus a new introduction, a bibliography, and a chronology of Anne Frank’s life and times.


Mum recommends this one as she feels that the younger lot need to be reminded of the horrors of the war and the holocaust. Ah my mum...always up for teaching those darn kids a lesson!

My Father-In-Law, Paul, recommends The Malloreon Series by David Eddings

Cover and Blurb of Book One: Guardians of the West 

Garion had slain the evil God Torak and had been crowned King of Riva. The Prophecy was fulfilled--or so it seemed. And then again, Garion found himself a pawn, caught between the two ancient Prophecies, with the fate of the world somehow resting on him.

I'm going to give these a shot on Paul's recommendation. But the series looks EPIC!  HERE is a link to the wiki page. 





My Mother-In-Law, Caroline, recommends her favourite aspirational read, The Argos Catalogue

Thanks to Bill Bailey, my husband and I refer to this as the laminated book of dreams. 

He he he. This last recommendation thoroughly cracked me up! Thanks Caroline!






Hope y'all liked the list!
Lx