Welcome to the sleepy village of Pudding Corner, a quintessentially English haven of golden cornfields, winding cobbled lanes … and murder.
Daphne Brewster has left London behind and is settling into her family’s new life in rural Norfolk, planting broad beans in raised beds and vintage hunting for their farmhouse.
But when the local headmaster is found dead in his potting shed, amongst his allotment cabbages, the village is ablaze: Who would kill beloved Mr Papplewick, pillar of the community? Daphne soon comes to realise perhaps the countryside isn’t so idyllic after all…
When the headmaster’s widow points her finger at Minerva, Daphne’s new friend, Daphne vows to clear her name. Sneaking into the crime scene and chasing down rumours gets her into hot water with the local inspector – until she comes across a faded photograph that unearths a secret buried for forty years…
They say nothing bad ever happens in close-knit Pudding Corner, but Daphne is close to the truth – dangerously close…
There’s death amongst the dahlias… A truly unputdownable whodunnit by Paula Sutton – otherwise known as Instagram’s happiest influencer: Hill House Vintage, the queen of cottagecore – an unforgettable new voice in cosy crime. Perfect for fans of Richard Osman, Janice Hallett and Richard Coles.
My Review
I don’t read a lot of cosy crime – I am usually attracted to more gritty and gruesome murder mysteries. That’s probably why I love a good Scandi Noir. Or Silent Witness. But The Potting Shed Murder was very entertaining and I really enjoyed reading it with my online book club over ten days.
Daphne Brewster, her husband and three children have upped sticks and left London for the peaceful Norfolk countryside. At least that was the plan. They have moved into a gorgeous house called Cranberry Farmhouse, in the beautiful village of Pudding Corner (I keep thinking of The House at Pooh Corner) and plan to grow their own, while Daphne restores old furniture. The kids have made friends, including Silvanus, who lives with his mum Minerva in what the locals believe to be a den of iniquity, where Wiccans and witches cast spells and no doubt dance around in the altogether.
But they have hardly been there more than a few weeks, when local headmaster Charles Papplewick is found dead in his potting shed. Was he murdered or did he simply have a massive heart attack? And why would anyone kill him? Everyone loved him, didn’t they?
Fingers are pointed at three women. His wife arch-bitch Augusta, snobby Marianne who wanted him to help get her son into a prestigious private school, and Minerva, with whom he has a secret relationship. But then there’s also Patsy from the local shop, whose sister Nancy has always believed she’s been holding a candle for him for over forty years.
There’s plenty of motive, means and opportunity, but surely none of these women would actually want to bump him off. Or would they? I enjoyed finding out.
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole, the author, and my fellow Pigeons for making this such an enjoyable read.
About the Author
Paula Sutton is the face behind Hill House Vintage, with over half-a-million Instagram followers. Named by British Vogue as the ‘happiest influencer on Instagram’, Paula is a vintage-hunting interiors stylist, author, columnist and television personality showcasing her wonderful cottage-core and cosy Norfolk life through a lens. Paula upped and left her glamorous London life – where she worked in fashion publishing – over ten years ago to move to Hill House in Norfolk with her family. Since then, Paula has curated a beautiful country home, mixing new with vintage, to find her perfect aesthetic, and is the creator of the popular blog, Hill House Vintage.
Amongst the scholars, secrets and soporifics of Victorian Oxford, the truth can be a bitter pill to swallow….
Jesus College, Oxford, 1881. An undergraduate is found dead at his lodgings and the medical examination reveals some shocking findings. When the young man’s guardian blames the college for his death and threatens a scandal, Basil Rice, a Jesus college fellow with a secret to hide, is forced to act and finds himself drawn into Sidney Parker’s sad life.
The mystery soon attracts the attention of Rhiannon ‘Non’ Vaughan, a young Welsh polymath and one of the young women newly admitted to university lectures. But when neither the college principal nor the powerful ladies behind Oxford’s new female halls will allow her to become involved, Non’s fierce intelligence and determination to prove herself drive her on.
Both misfits at the university, Non and Basil form an unlikely partnership, and it soon falls to them to investigate the mysterious circumstances of Parker’s death. But between the corporate malfeasance and the medical quacks, they soon find the dreaming spires of Oxford are not quite what they seem.…
An intriguing first installment of The Oxford Mysteries series by master crime writer, Alis Hawkins. Perfect for fans of Laura Shepherd-Robinson, Sarah Waters and Kaite Welsh.
My Review
I knew as soon as I started reading A Bitter Remedy that it would become one of my favourite books of the year so far. In fact I’ve already recommended it to my brother and downloaded a sample of the next book in the series.
Set in 1881, we meet Rhiannon ‘Non’ Vaughan, an unusual and very liberated young woman, who has come to Oxford from semi-rural Wales. Life was different there and Non hates that she has to keep her mouth firmly shut at Oxford, so as not to hinder other women from being admitted to the university. She is so far only allowed to attend lectures – she cannot be a ‘proper’ student as such. Any bad behaviour could put the women’s movement back years.
But Non isn’t one to keep quiet and immediately puts the back up of a male student, by discussing the story of Lysistrata in detail, a subject considered unseemly for a woman. He complains and she is banned from lectures for a term.
Non forms a partnership with lecturer Basil Rice, who has enormous respect for her intelligence and initiative – but then he has his own secrets to keep.
When student Sidney Parker is found dead in his lodgings, Rice is called to investigate and to try and steer the blame away from the college. But Parker’s guardian George Reardon has other plans and it all becomes very complicated and lurid. Can the university prevent a scandal? Was Parker murdered? We shall have to find out. And Non is not to be deterred from becoming involved.
But probably the most important aspect of the book revolves around a disease known as spermatorrhoea, which young men were diagnosed with in the 19th century. It was supposed to cause every malady known to man (it didn’t affect women – if you read up about it you’ll understand why). And of course every quack in the country was selling their own cure to alleviate the symptoms. Poor Sydney was treating himself for an illness which didn’t even exist.
I simply adored A Bitter Remedy. I am always a bit wary of historical fiction as it can be overlong and frankly a bit boring, but this book is amazing. It’s got drama, it’s got murder. It’s even got humour. I couldn’t get enough of it.
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole, the author, and my fellow Pigeons for making this such an enjoyable read.
About the Author
Alis Hawkins grew up on a dairy farm in Cardiganshire. Her inner introvert thought it would be a good idea to become a shepherd and, frankly, if she had, she might have been published sooner. As it was, three years reading English at Corpus Christi College, Oxford revealed an extrovert streak and a social conscience which saw her train as a Speech and Language Therapist. She has spent the subsequent three decades variously bringing up two sons, working with children and young people on the autism spectrum and writing fiction, non-fiction and plays. She writes the kind of books she likes to read: character-driven historical crime and mystery fiction with what might be called literary production values.
+ alcoholism, domestic noir, family, fiction, grief, Historical fiction, history, loss, love, marriage, motherhood, photography, relationships, review, war, World War Two, WW2
Hungry Ghosts by C J Barker
The lives of Vic Woods and Ruth Wolfe, working-class teenagers from Liverpool and London, are profoundly disrupted by the arrival of World War II.
Ruth’s journey leads her to aerial photographic interpretation, though her aspirations for advancement are denied, while Vic’s wartime experiences with bomber command haunt him long after the war is over. Their post-war marriage and tumultuous relationship with their son, James, make for a gripping narrative of trauma, conflict and, ultimately, love.
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Set against the backdrop of World War II and the social upheaval of the late 1960s, Hungry Ghosts transports readers into the drama of two pivotal eras in history, exploring the intergenerational impact of war, particularly on the intricate relationships between fathers and sons.
Hungry Ghosts is not just a war story; it’s a timeless exploration of family bonds and the indelible scars left by war.
My Review
Based on Buddhist tradition, ‘hungry ghosts’ are those who ‘chase after what they think they need, but they can never find peace, even when they acquire what they thought they wanted. They are always hungry and never happy. What they have is never enough.’
It’s an interesting concept and Vic is told that, ‘to help a hungry ghost, we must listen to them and help them experience something good and beautiful to believe in.’ Vic knows he is one of them, ‘chasing, chasing, chasing after what he thought he wanted.’ This is a lesson he learns when he spends some time in a monastery after collapsing with exhaustion following months of photographing the Vietnam war.
But do we as the reader have sympathy with Vic? Particularly as wives and mothers, do we side so vehemently with Ruth, that all we can see is his drinking, his selfishness, his misogyny and his abandonment of his son. I am not of their generation, I am not working class, I received a private education leaving school at 16, but continuing with further education for another four years, the latter being in the early 1970s. Women of Ruth’s generation and class were forbidden from doing any of this.
My father was born in Poland, joined up in 1939 aged 16 and was taken prisoner-of-war in Siberia. When he finally escaped, he came to England and joined the RAF Polish Squadron. I never felt the effects of ‘combat stress’ being passed on to me, but then he never flew in active combat, as the war was ending, nor did he see what Vic saw. I suffered the aftermath of my Jewish mother having to flee nazi overrun Vienna in 1938. Her retreat into barbiturates and agoraphobia had a profound effect on my childhood.
But I do see the effects of PTSD on a friend who was in the Falklands War, and at 18 years old plucked body parts out of the water. What you see you can never unsee and it has shaped his life.
Vic was one of those who dropped bombs on Dresden and had horrific nightmares about the city burning, the charred bodies, the trapped and terrified children. What you see you can never unsee. And Vic can never unsee the horror. And that is what takes him to Vietnam, where his photos make him one of the most renowned war photographers in the world. His book ‘World on Fire’ becomes the blueprint for war photography.
But his son James only saw an alcoholic bully, who stood over him and his mother, his breath stinking of booze, then finally abandoning them to travel the world, ‘just taking pictures’. James could never understand why he didn’t help save anyone, just stood as an observer with a camera. It’s how we feel when we watch a nature programme and cannot understand why the filmmakers didn’t help that lost polar bear cub or save a baby penguin from certain death.
I am massively conflicted after reading Hungry Ghosts. I love Ruth and I can sympathise with Vic, but I feel that maybe they should have just divorced straight away. Then he could have had visiting rights where James was concerned, Ruth could have had another crack at finding love, and Vic would not have felt beholden to her.
Many thanks to @ZooloosBT for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.
About the Author
Born in England, resident in Thirroul, Australia, Chris Barker has been an educator in schools and universities in the UK and Australia. He has published several non- fiction books, and now writes fiction between stints in the garden, where he grows vegetables and looks after chickens. He has published short stories in England, America and Australia.
CJ’s Links
Twitter : https://twitter.com/chrisjonbarker
Website : https://creasedattheedges.com/
Book Links
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Claire is expecting a baby. It’s her dream but not everyone is as supportive as she’d like . . .
Isolated and vulnerable, she is drawn into an online group for ‘natural motherhood’ and is warmly embraced by the sisterhood.
As Claire withdraws further into their world and with her due date fast approaching, she is unsettled by the group’s conformity and the total shunning of medical intervention.
But blind loyalty can be catastrophic – and her silence could be fatal . .
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About the Author
Celia Silvani is a charity communications manager and freelance writer, who has written for Stylist, The Telegraph and BBC Future on topics ranging from weddings to hurricanes. She got the inspiration for Baby Teeth from an NBC article she couldn’t stop thinking about, and interviewed midwives and obstetricians to get a fuller picture of birthing stories – as well as spending a lot of time lurking in the dark corners of internet freebirthing groups…
Geraldine and her apricot poodle are usually reluctant to leave her pretty little mews house in St John’s Wood.
But what with her sister moving in with two pugs, and her daughter unexpectedly appearing on her doorstep – both the victims of dumping by their partners – Geraldine and her bijou home can barely take the strain.
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So it’s hard to resist the invitation from the handsome, enigmatic Ellis to accompany him for the weekend to his old university – All Saints, Indiana. Especially when the trip includes travel on his friend’s private plane. Of course, she knows nothing about American football, or anything about his friends. She doesn’t even know that much about him. But who cares? With her bag perfectly packed, she’s jet-set ready for a wonderful few days. What can possibly go wrong?
Hilariously satirical about English and American manners, Lesley Fernández- Armesto is Nancy Mitford in the time slot of Ocado. She’s Absolutely Fabulous meets Alexander McCall Smith.
My Review
Geraldine is divorced. Her military ex-husband Jonty has run off with Sally, leaving Geraldine with only her apricot poodle Bolly. She now lives in a tiny mews house in St John’s Wood. Then she meets Ellis, smooth, handsome, American, and a dead ringer for Cary Grant. He invites her to go to Indiana with him for the All Saints football match. As her sister and her two pugs, her daughter Cassie and God knows who else, are coming to stay, it couldn’t be better timing. But little does she know what she’s let herself in for. It would be my worst nightmare.
This was so funny. Geraldine’s observations about the Americans she meets at the football match are hilarious. The yanks (apart from functioning alcoholic Barb) all find her a bit weird. That’s because they have no idea what she’s talking about, but put her eccentricity down to her ‘Englishness’. Not that I think Geraldine is that wonderful herself. She’s a terrible snob, who does basically nothing except go to the theatre and lunch with her friends. My favourite bit is when she quotes Lord Byron, ‘The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold and his cohorts were gleaming in purple and gold (the colours of the All Saints team). ‘Brian?’ says Hal, ‘Is he here?’ ‘Byron, Lord Byron.’ Hal took another bite….’The Syrians? Where do they come into it?’
Then there is the scene when a group of Jonty’s friends are in France including Giles and Phyllida, and Jonty’s mother Mrs Acton-Payne who talks openly about how wonderful ex-wife Geraldine was in front of boring second wife Sally. It was so hilarious, I literally laughed out loud. Grandson Rupert’s comments add to the hilarity. Shame we didn’t see him again.
But back to Ellis. I’m not keen on him either. He’s a bit of a prat and all the terms of endearment he uses like ‘my love’ and ‘sweet dream’ (puts fingers down throat in imitation of vomiting) or whatever, are worse than ex-husband Jonty calling her ‘old thing’ (my husband wouldn’t dare). It’s all a bit politically incorrect at times, so please don’t be offended. It’s part of what makes it so funny.
Don’t expect a suspenseful mystery or a thriller, or a murder (though you may want to kill a few of the characters by the end). This is a character-driven book full of brilliantly written observations from either side. It will have you crying tears of laughter and of course there are dogs. Lots of them.
Many thanks to Grace Pilkington Publicity @GracePublicity for inviting me to be part of the #blogtour.
About the Author
Lesley Fernández-Armesto read War Studies at King’s College, London. She has written for The Times, ghosted an African president’s autobiography, and adapted Shakespeare’s As You Like It for an opera. She is never seen without her dachshunds. Away Weekend is her first novel.
+ family, fiction, lies, love, motherhood, relationships, review, secrets, thriller
The New Son by Iain Maitland
Nina always wanted a child of her own. Now she has one.
Nina feels trapped. Her partner Gary is controlling, his daughter hates her, and she’s recently suffered a miscarriage. Just as her life seems hopeless, Alex, the son she gave up for adoption nearly 20 years ago, shows up at her door. Somehow, he has tracked her down.
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Their reunion is everything Nina has hoped for. Now she has a child of her own, someone in the family who really cares about her.
But honeymoons are brief and this one is no exception. Far from welcoming him, Gary is hostile to Alex and as their arguments become increasingly vicious, it soon becomes clear that Nina must choose between them.
But how will the abusive Gary react if she rejects him? And can she trust Alex? Is he really the loving son he seems to be – or does he have a sinister agenda of his own?
My Review
First of all I must just say that I disliked Gary as much, if not more, than any vile character in any book I have read in recent years. He has no redeeming features whatsoever. Coercive men in novels are often handsome and charming and you don’t realise what they are up to until it’s too late. And no-one believes you, because outside of the home they are still handsome and charming.
But Gary is a lout, a yob. He’s an unattractive con man who owes everyone money. He goes to the pub often, drinks too much and slobbers in his sleep. I’ve owned dogs with more charm and finesse. His ex-wife Gemma is almost as bad, insulting Nina and screaming at both of them. She doesn’t know how Gary can bear to sleep with her. Well he slept with you didn’t he Gemma, so he’s not exactly discerning.
Quite why Nina ever got together with Gary is totally beyond me. And his daughter Chloe from his first marriage, who lives with them, is also vile. Then into Nina’s sad life (having recently had a miscarriage) walks Alex, the son she gave away at birth.
To be honest I found Nina a bit bonkers at times. The thoughts that go through her head are very melodramatic and she definitely has an overactive imagination. She still believes that she could rekindle her relationship with the love of her life (when she was fifteen) and the father of her beloved boy. But when things take a turn for the worse, nothing she ever imagined could be more sinister than the unfolding reality.
Nina is written brilliantly – I don’t think we are supposed to like her much – and so are the other characters. Each one is fleshed out with all their worst flaws and features laid out for everyone to see. And that’s what makes them so unlikeable. At times I wondered if there was a bit of the tongue-in-cheek about the book. It’s scary and very entertaining.
Many thanks to @ZooloosBT for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.
About the Author
Iain Maitland is the author of three previous psych thrillers for Inkubator Books: The
Soulmate, The Perfect Husband and The Girl Downstairs. Iain is also the author of two memoirs, Dear Michael, Love Dad, a book of letters written to his eldest son who experienced depression and anorexia, and (co- authored with Michael) Out Of The Madhouse. He has also written a semi-autobiographical novel, The Old Man, His Dog & Their Longest Journey.
He is an Ambassador for Stem4, the teenage mental health charity. He talks regularly about mental health issues in schools and colleges and workplaces. Find out more about Iain at http://www.iainmaitland.net and twitter.com/iainmaitland
Iain’s Links
Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/iain.maitland.31
Twitter : http://www.twitter.com/iainmaitland
Website : http://www.iainmaitland.net
Book Links
Goodreads : https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/209313244-the-new-son
Buy Links : https://mybook.to/thenewson-zbt
Fallen from the heights of love
to the depths of madness,
she flees to the endless,
wailing moor.
There is nothing here but shadows,
a lantern – her white dress flickering in the wind.
There is nothing here but shadows,
a lantern – and you.
In your hands are her confessions.
Between your fingers, a book of prayers.
Drink the shadows with her –
and you will taste the fullness of light.
Remedy is a collection of poetry for those who refuse to be extinguished. It is a story told in four parts, each part mending a different kind of pain. Remedy will take you by the hand through the falling, severing, healing, and resurrecting – giving you the courage to begin again.
“Taylor’s voice soars to new heights. Remedy is soul-food, scars and all” – Scott-Patrick Mitchell, author of Clean.
About the Author
Emily Bridget Taylor is a poet, artist and performer. Her words and imagery are inspired by honey-filled days of light and love, and the dark hours between – the duality that is Life’s gift. In the wake of the pandemic, Emily began sharing her poetry online. What followed was a surprising, magical journey in which her words and images resonated around the world. Her poetry collection Remedy, art series Remedy for Walls and performance poetry touch on themes of love, trauma, self-care and healing. Her artistic calling is to dissolve shame in all its forms. Follow her journey at www.emilybridgettaylor.com and @emilybridgettaylor on socials.
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Best-selling author, Jonathan Sendel has been murdered. Now, his clone must solve the mystery.
In the near future when someone is murdered, a clone of the victim can be commissioned to help police solve the crime. This process is costly, tedious and not always successful. Memory lapses, mental implosions, and rouge clones are not uncommon. It’s risky, but Jonathan has the money, the fans, and the means, and so his clone must navigate a treacherous labyrinth of secrets to reclaim the life stolen from him and put his murderer behind bars.
Genre: Thriller / Mystery
Publisher: Ink Smith Publishing
Before his untimely death, Jonathan was stuck in a rut. His marriage was failing, writer’s block had his Jim Starlight series at a dead end, and his affair with a college student was about to go public. When his charred remains are found inside his remote cabin it’s clear that the murderer is someone in his inner circle.
His clone only has a matter of days to unravel the mystery before he loses the vast fortune he spent his entire life, the first one, building. As he uncovers his previous life’s transgressions, the people he trusted most may have some unsavory opinions about clones. Jonathan must take his investigation into his own hands to have a chance at life.
The Second Life of Jonathan Sendel is a twist-filled murder mystery, that examines the life of a beloved celebrity tarnished by scandal and the painful process of coming to terms with one’s own demons.
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War is coming, a war that could mean the end of the republic.
But how can you do anything about it when you’re a captive, slaving in the guts of a brutal patrol ship.
Genre: Sci-fi / YA / Dystopian
Clara Perdue isn’t sure why she took Jack Pike’s place at the slave market. She isn’t sure why she saved another girl and volunteered for the Scorpion, a Coastforce ship that plies the Channel, murdering refugees and raiding the villages along the coast. But when she meets Xavi, another slave, she feels emotions she’s never felt before.
Meanwhile, Jack Pike has taken Clara’s parents to safety, and as he tries to track her down he finds an unexpected ally. But how can they find Clara?
Can Clara escape somehow? And, even if she can, how can she stop the war?
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You can choose your home, but you can’t choose who lives next door . . .
Twenty-five-year-old Kat Bennett has never felt at home anywhere, especially not in crumbling Shelley House. The other residents think she’s prickly and unapproachable, but beneath her tough exterior, Kat is plagued by guilt from her past and looking for somewhere to belong.
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Seventy-seven-year-old Dorothy Darling has lived in Shelley House for longer than anyone else, and if you believe the other tenants, she’s as cantankerous and vindictive as they come. Dorothy may spend her days spying on the neighbours, but she has a closely guarded secret herself – and a good reason for barely leaving her home.
When their building faces demolition, sworn enemies Kat and Dorothy become unlikely allies in their quest to save their historic home; and even less likely detectives when they suspect that foul play is coming from within Shelley House . . .
My Review
After a couple of really quite dark novels, it was refreshing to read something lighthearted and humorous. And with a small Jack Russell terrier called Reggie as one of the co-conspirators, how could I not love this.
It was also very sad at times and once again I cried. I really felt for Kat, with her shitty childhood and dreadful mother. And I really felt for Dorothy aka Ms Darling (never call her Mrs), though it’s quite late in the book that we discover her history and why she behaves as she does.
There are lots of other likeable (and definitely unlikeable) characters in Nosy Neighbours, including Kat’s elderly ‘landlord’ Joseph, 15-year-old Ayesha and her father Omar, Gloria upstairs with her terrible taste in men, giant Tomasz with his fierce bulldog called Princess, and the anti-social, noisy tenant in Flat 4. There’s also journalist Will, who seems lovely, but no-one trusts an old hack (or young hack in this case).
Dorothy has lived in Shelley House the longest, and treats it as her own. She looks after the post, takes out and sorts other people’s rubbish and makes copious notes in her notebook as she patrols the corridors. When Joseph is attacked, she makes a list of suspects with their possible MOs, means, opportunities and alibis. No-one is safe once Dorothy is on the prowl. And she doesn’t like dogs.
She’s very suspicious of newcomer Kat with her pink hair, tattoos and prickly manner. What is she hiding?
When on the rare occasion the neighbours come together, they are at each other’s throats. Only now the building is about to be demolished and they all face eviction, can they put their considerable differences to one side and save Shelley House? Especially Dorothy and Kat. It’s fun finding out and I really enjoyed this book. I was reminded of the 1987 film Batteries Not Included starring Jessica Tandy, without the help of the aliens. But we have Reggie instead.
Many thanks to @Tr4cyF3nt0n for inviting me to be part of the #CompulsiveReaders #blogtour and to NetGalley for an ARC.
About the Author
Freya Sampson is the USA Today bestselling author of The Last Chance Library and The Lost Ticket/The Girl on the 88 Bus. She studied history at Cambridge University and worked in television as an executive producer, making documentaries about everything from the British royal family to neighbours from hell. She lives in London with her husband, children and cats. Nosy Neighbours is her third novel.



























