Well after last week I anticipated a quiet week book hauling, however as you might have guessed it didn’t work out that way. But I did manage another week without any review copies which is a plus in helping me get through my existing commitments.
Kindle Purchases
A Hundred Hands by Dianne Noble (99p)
When Polly’s husband is jailed for paedophilia, she flees the village where her grandmother raised her and travels to India where she stays with her friend, Amanda.
Polly is appalled by the poverty, and what her husband had done, and her guilt drives her to help the street children of Kolkata. It’s while working she meets other volunteers, Liam and Finlay. Her days are divided between teaching the children and helping with their health needs. But when Liam’s successor refuses to let Polly continue working, she’s devastated to think the children will feel she’s abandoned them.
After a health scare of her own, she discovers her friend, Amanda, is pregnant. Amanda leaves India to have her child. At this time Polly and Finlay fall in love and work together helping the children. Tragedy strikes when one child is found beaten and another dead. Polly feels history repeating itself when Finlay becomes emotionally attached to a young girl.
Can Polly recover from her broken heart and continue to help the children, or will she give up and return home?
Hostile Witness by Nell Peters (99p)
When her husband leaves her and their sons to shack up with a younger model, Callie Ashton thinks she’s hit rock bottom. She’s wrong. Already unemployed and struggling to hold everything together, Callie’s life goes into freefall when she stumbles across the murder of a neighbour. The killer soon becomes intent on despatching Callie too, wrongly assuming she can identify him.
Despite her new man being the officer in charge of the investigation, Callie’s in great danger – and it soon becomes clear the murderer isn’t too worried whom he kills or maims in his quest to eliminate her. No one is safe and the killer seems to know her every movement. Soon, with no resolution in sight, Callie feels she has no choice but to take matters into her own hands…but at what cost to her safety – and sanity?
The Ghost by Andrew Lowe (Free)
A MISTAKE HE CAN’T FORGET
A STALKER WHO WON’T FORGIVEDorian Cook is a jaded film critic, haunted by a horrific act of violence that defined his impoverished childhood.
Now, many years later, someone is sending him threatening messages. Someone who knows what really happened on that sweltering day in the UK summer of 1976.
Someone who wants revenge.
Lilac Girls by Martha Hall Kelly (99p)
New York socialite Caroline Ferriday has her hands full with her post at the French consulate and a new love on the horizon. But Caroline’s world is forever changed when Hitler’s army invades Poland in September 1939—and then sets its sights on France.
An ocean away from Caroline, Kasia Kuzmerick, a Polish teenager, senses her carefree youth disappearing as she is drawn deeper into her role as courier for the underground resistance movement. In a tense atmosphere of watchful eyes and suspecting neighbors, one false move can have dire consequences.
For the ambitious young German doctor, Herta Oberheuser, an ad for a government medical position seems her ticket out of a desolate life. Once hired, though, she finds herself trapped in a male-dominated realm of Nazi secrets and power.
The lives of these three women are set on a collision course when the unthinkable happens and Kasia is sent to Ravensbrück, the notorious Nazi concentration camp for women. Their stories cross continents—from New York to Paris, Germany, and Poland—as Caroline and Kasia strive to bring justice to those whom history has forgotten.
Together by Julie Cohen (99p)
Is this a great love story?
Or a story about great love?
You decide.On a morning that seems just like any other, Robbie wakes in his bed, his wife Emily asleep beside him, as always. He rises and dresses, makes his coffee, feeds his dogs, just as he usually would. But then he leaves Emily a letter and does something that will break her heart. As the years go back all the way to 1962, Robbie’s actions become clearer as we discover the story of a couple with a terrible secret – one they will do absolutely anything to protect.
Tastes Like Fear by Sarah Hilary (99p)
The fragile young girl who causes the fatal car crash disappears from the scene. A runaway who doesn’t want to be found, she only wants to return to the man who understands her and offers her warmth, comfort, a home. He gives her shelter. Just as he gives shelter to the other lost girls who live in his house.
He’s the head of her new family.
D.I. Marnie Rome has faced many dangerous criminals but she has never come up against a man like Harm. She thinks that she knows families, their secrets and their fault lines. But as she begins investigating the girl’s disappearance nothing can prepare her for what she’s about to face.
French License by Joe Start (£4.99 was free)
This narrative non-fiction story covers the author’s attempt, as a Californian expat, to obtain his driver’s license in Paris. What appears simple enough becomes a tragicomedy as he confronts one obstacle after another. It has taken him so long, that he’s able to steer the reader onto unexpected detours along the way. You’ll cross funny town names, race against the clock, hear how to talk your way out of tickets, berate blasé customer service agents and bump into wildlife.
There are impossible situations, ‘only in France’ characters and cautionary tales from the bumbling of an average Joe. Read until the end to see if he beat the odds and made it or not.
It’s an easy, entertaining and quick read. Although it’s not a how-to, you’ll be informed with many surprising bits that even most locals don’t know. Many facts are published here for the first time in English. The author intertwines facts & figures inside 40 comical stories. Chapters may be read as standalone tales, or as a chronology of mishaps on the road to the pink permit prize.
My Summer of Magic Moments by Caroline Roberts (99p)
When a seaside escape spells a little romance . . .
Claire is ready for a bright new chapter. Winding her way to the coast for a cosy cottage retreat, she prays that three weeks of blissful peace and summer sunshine will wash away the pain of the last year.
Claire’s a survivor – she’s growing proud of the scars that prove it – and she’s determined to make the most of each and every day, to seize those little magic moments that give life its sparkle.
Her plan for peaceful solitude goes awry when handsome, brooding Ed turns up in the cottage next door. Will a little summer romance prove the worst distraction? Or might it be the perfect remedy?
The Secret Chord by Kathryn Guare (£2.53 was Free)
An Irishman on the run. He’s left a lot of things behind him…but they’re not far enough back..
Conor McBride has lost everything, and if he can’t find a way to disappear in a hurry, the next thing he loses could be his life. Running from enemies he’s never met and haunted by his own destructive actions, Conor needs a refuge secure enough to hold his secrets. A farmhouse inn tucked amidst the green mountains of Vermont seems ideal, but when his past catches up with him, Conor discovers the beautiful young innkeeper has secrets of her own, and that hers are more likely to get them both killed.
An Act of Silence by Colette McBeth (99p)
These are the facts I collect.
My son Gabriel met a woman called Mariela in a bar. She went home with him. They next morning she was found in an allotment.
Mariela is dead.
Gabriel has been asked to report to Camden Police station in six hours for questioning
Linda Moscow loves her son; it’s her biological instinct to keep him safe. But if she’s not sure of his innocence, how can she stand by him? Should she go against everything she believes in to protect him?
She’s done it before, and the guilt nearly killed her.
Now, the past is catching up with them. As old secrets resurface, Lind is faced with another impossible choice. Only this time, it’s her life on the line…
Just Haven’t Met You Yet by Care Woods (Free)
Percy James has everything a girl could want: a comfy flat, a steady relationship and a truly lovely group of friends. Then she is approached by Eros Tech. Eros is ‘the future of love’ – an agency that brings together soulmates using phone data. Percy has been identified as a match for one of Eros’s super wealthy clients. The only problem is she already has a boyfriend . . . but what if this is *destiny*? Would you – could you – pass up a chance to meet your one true love?
The Invitation by Lucy Foley (99p)
It’s 1951. In Europe’s post-war wreckage, the glittering Italian Riviera draws an eclectic cast of characters; lured by the glamour but seeking an escape.
Amongst them, two outcasts: Hal, an English journalist who’s living on his charm; and Stella, an enigmatic society beauty, bound to a profiteering husband. When Hal receives a mysterious invitation from a wealthy Contessa, he finds himself aboard a yacht headed for Cannes film festival.
Scratch the beautiful surface, and the post-war scars of his new companions are quick to show. Then there’s Stella, whose secrets run deeper than anyone’s — stretching back into the violence of Franco’s Spain. And as Hal gets drawn closer, a love affair begins that will endanger everyone…
Another Woman’s Husband by Gill Paul (on pre-order for 99p)
Two women who challenged the Crown.
Divided by time. Bound by a secret…1911
At the age of fifteen, carefree Mary Kirk and indomitable Wallis Warfield meet at summer camp. Their friendship will survive heartbreaks, separation and the demands of the British Crown until it is shattered by one unforgivable betrayal.1997
Rachel’s romantic break in Paris with her fiancé ends in tragedy when the car ahead crashes. Inside was Princess Diana. Back in Brighton, Rachel is haunted by the accident, and intrigued to learn the princess had visited the last home of Wallis, Duchess of Windsor, only hours before the crash. Soon, the discovery of a long-forgotten link to Wallis Simpson leads Rachel to the truth behind a scandal that shook the world…
Love the look of The Lilac Girls, The invitation and Another Woman’s Husband.
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Another Woman’s Husband seems to be getting a lot of praise so I’m glad I’ve ordered that one.
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Brilliant I’m tempted to pre-order it. Have you read anything else by Gill Paul?
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I did buy The Secret Wife but haven’t read it yet.
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Ha! I’ve got that one too but not read it either! 😀
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The blurb for French License made me laugh :p What a nice haul!
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You’re probably better placed to know how realistic that one is, but it looks fun.
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I’d rather not remember, haha! The first time I tried, it was a disaster xD
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Together and An Act of Silence are both absolutely amazing reads. Enjoy.
I wasn’t so enamoured with The Invitation so I shall be interested to know your thoughts.
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Don’t hold your breath on me getting to it any time soon! I loved the cover but was passing it over until I saw mention of the Spanish Civil War, which was the attraction for me.
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Another great haul, Jill! I absolutely loved Another Woman’s Husband!
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You’re the second person to tell me that, so I’m very pleased I went for that one.
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Ive got book one in the Marnie Rome series by Sarah Hillary, gosh so many series! I’ve failed miserably in not accepting review copies, and I have a Netgalley addiction right now 🙈 I’ve got 23 review copies in total and I think that’s manageable so I’m reading my own books anyway
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I’m not going to tell you how many are in my NetGalley backlog, but I wish it was 23! I got carried away when I first joined before I fully understood the implications of gaily requesting. I was keeping up until my reading slowed and I’m now on a NetGalley ban. I don’t get books sent by publishers so I can control my obligations going forward. My weekend in Harrogate made me realise how many books I have that I’ve forgotten about and really want to read.
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I may own Lilac Girls. I need a new blog feature–firgotten Kindle books bought on implude for a buck! Hope you’ll review it.
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Unfortunately I’ve also got a Kindle full of impulse buys (which I do want to read) but it does slow down the process. This was actually on my watch list though so hopefully it might make it to the top of the pile a bit quicker.
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I think this month I will make myself read ONE and review it. One of the memes I do is mostly YA and I’m not a good fit there. So I might do forgotten Kindle books occasionally!
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That sounds like a good plan. At the start of the year I said I’d read one book a month from my tbr – it hasn’t happened.
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LOL…my plan will likely end up the same!
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My review of “The Lilac girls”: https://fictionophile.wordpress.com/2016/04/24/lilac-girls-by-martha-hall-kelly/ It was a difficult and disturbing read, but worth it.
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I really enjoyed an Act Of Silence. Thanks for the heads up about Another Woman’s Husband … I’ve been seeing this one about quite a bit and really fancied it. Off to pre-order 🙂
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It seems to be getting a lot of good press and several other bloggers have raved about it – at 99p it would be silly not to.
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Great haul! I’ve just purchased “An act of silence” after reading this post. I loved “The Lilac girls” but it was a difficult read – so be warned. My review: https://fictionophile.wordpress.com/2016/04/24/lilac-girls-by-martha-hall-kelly/
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Thanks Lynne, duly warned. Hope you enjoy An Act of Silence – I suspect you might get to it before me.
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