The Island Love Song by Emma Cowell @EmmaCowellBooks #NetGalley

The Island Love Song

by Emma Cowell 

Wow! What can I say about The Island Love Song which would do it the justice it deserves!?

I could talk about it for hours to be honest with you, but I don’t want to spoil anything for anyone who hasn’t read it yet.

First, as I’ve said before, I’ve never been to Greece, but I honestly felt like I was in Greece whilst reading this novel. I felt the same when reading Emma Cowell’s previous novels. I would really, really love to go to Greece now and experience the beauty of the country Emma portrays so enticingly. The food sounds amazing also! I love that food plays its part throughout the story. I think I actually drooled at times. lol!

Anyway, this story is about sisters Ella and Georgia. They lost their Mum and are returning to Hydra to scatter her ashes in the sea. They have a rich history of happy memories with their mother there. As if that isn’t heart-wrenching enough, there has also been heartbreak for Ella and guilt for Georgia over secrets she’s carried for years.

The sisters are like chalk and cheese. Ella is very much a free spirit. Tied to nothing and no-one following an extremely traumatic experience. Georgia is the organised, dependable one, who’s life she has dedicated to her husband and bringing up their daughter, Phoenix. Neither of them is particularly happy though, nor have they had a close relationship, so coming together for two weeks on the Island of Hydra was never going to be straight forward.

I couldn’t wait to find out where their story would take me, and I was completely invested in the emotional journey I was taken on.

I liked Ella immediately and my heart broke for her as I learned what she had been through.

Georgia isn’t as easy to like, but I came to understand her more as the story progressed, and I did really feel for her in the end.

Phoenix is a beautiful character. Oh, to be so young and self-assured!

Harrison is a fascinating character and one I warmed to quickly despite his history with Ella.

There are other beautiful characters in this book too, all who add their own little something special.

This is a compelling tale about grieving sisters, the devastation secrets and lies can cause, the power of true love, and the true meaning of family.

I absolutely LOVED it! It’s just beautiful!

** A big thank you to the author and publisher for my review copy of The Island Love Song via NetGalley **

ICYMI….

https://chataboutbooks.blog/2022/03/18/one-last-letter-from-greece-the-new-sweeping-romantic-debut-novel-to-escape-with-in-summer-2022-by-emma-cowell-emmalloydcowell-avonbooksuk-bookreview/

https://chataboutbooks.blog/2023/05/30/the-house-in-the-olive-grove-by-emma-cowell-emmalloydcowell/

Escape to the beautiful Greek Island of Hydra with this moving novel, filled with family secrets and romance

Emma Cowell, author of THE HOUSE IN THE OLIVE GROVE, returns with her brand new, emotional and romantic novel set on an idyllic Greek Island.

Hydra, the picturesque Greek island, is a paradise for most, yet for sisters Ella and Georgia, it is a place where their darkest secrets dwell. And now the time has come for them to confront their past as they return to Greece to scatter their mother’s ashes.

Ella is haunted by a love song that was written for her by the man who broke her heart years earlier and she longs to find peace so she can move on with her life.

Georgia pretends everything in her life is perfect, but she is plagued with guilt. If what she’s kept hidden for decades was revealed, their family would never be the same again.

The island is urging the sisters to confront the truth, but can they build a future on the ruins of their past?

Buy it immediately!!!

Happy reading!

I Know What You’ve Done by Dorothy Koomson 

I Know What You’ve Done

by Dorothy Koomson 

I Know What You’ve Done is the third book I’ve read by Dorothy Koomson. I’d be lying if I said it was my favourite so far, but it did keep me intrigued enough to really want to find out what was going on.

There are a lot of characters to keep track of. All of whom live in close proximity. It did make me wonder who could potentially be watching your every move. None of us knows what goes on with our neighbours behind closed doors.

Some of the character’s behaviour was difficult to understand, although none of us know how we would deal with a situation until you find yourself in said situation. I enjoyed the realistic variation of characters. I wouldn’t want to live in their street though!

I didn’t guess the twist at the end, but I can’t say I found it shocking either.

Overall, an enjoyable read but maybe a little underwhelming for what I expected. I will certainly be reading other books from Dorothy Koomson as I really enjoyed the first two books I read a while ago.

https://chataboutbooks.blog/2022/03/09/the-friend-by-dorothy-koomson-bookreview/

https://chataboutbooks.blog/2023/06/09/the-woman-he-loved-before-by-dorothy-koomson-dorothykoomson/

** I read I Know What You’ve Done as part of a buddy read with friends on Instagram. I read the paperback edition **

What if all your neighbours’ secrets landed in a diary on your doorstep?

What if the woman who gave it to you was murdered by one of the people in the diary?

What if the police asked if you knew anything?

Would you hand over the book of secrets?

Or … would you try to find out what everyone had done?

Happy reading!

#FlashbackFriday June 2024

Hi, and welcome to my Flashback Friday feature!

On the first Friday of each month, I like to look back at the books I was reading the previous year during the same month.

Please do join in if you have the time, I’d love to see your posts 🙂

A big thank you to those who already join in regularly! xx

Here are my reviews from June 2023 + a link to previous June FBFs….

happy reading!

The Long Way Home by Audrey Howard 

The Long Way Home

by Audrey Howard 

The Long Way Home is a beautifully written book. The first by this author for me but hopefully not the last.

Set in Liverpool in the early 1900s we meet Amy when she is just ten years old and doing a grand job of looking after her mother and her ten siblings whilst her father goes out to work. Her mother is ill, with tuberculosis, and is unable to leave her bed often. Can you even imagine living like that these days. Thirteen people to one bedroom! People seemed to just get on with things in those days, doing whatever they had to do to survive. No such thing as universal credit or such like back then. You worked whenever work was available, made the best of what you had, and older children helped to bring up the younger children. Everyone mucked in. Despite this they quite often came across as happier and closer as a family.

Unfortunately, Pa’s wealthy sister, Aunt Zillah is unable to carry a child to term so she decides she is adopting Amy and plans to bring her up as her own. With his wife now in hospital and him having to work to keep food on the table, Amy’s Pa allows it as Zillah has promised him money to move to better housing and support for the other ten children.

Amy is understandably traumatised by being dragged from the family she loves, to a massive unfamiliar house, by her aunt who blatantly doesn’t have a maternal bone in her body. My heart broke for her, and I prayed she might escape the claws of her aunt one way or another.

I was engrossed in her story as she grows into a beautiful young lady who never gives up hope of finding her family again. I love how her relationship with Joe grows as they grow. However, Zillah has other ideas and what she puts Amy through at only sixteen years old is horrific.

Zillah’s husband, Caleb, is a much more likeable character. I’m so glad Amy has him to help protect her from his heartless wife. Whatever he saw in Zillah I’ll never know, but quite often in those days people of wealth married for money and the hope of suitable heirs rather than for love didn’t they. I can’t even imagine.

Amy’s story is one of true resilience. With her aunt, an abusive husband, and a war to contend with it seems as though happiness is impossible, but true love always wins.

There are so many beautiful characters throughout this book, including some of the staff at the Seymour home (which reminded me of Downton Abbey). It’s such a rollercoaster of emotion and is so full of love. Love for family, love between friends, and fighting for the love of your life. I absolutely loved it!

** I read the paperback edition of The Long Way Home. I have no idea where I bought it from though. It’s been on my bookshelf for years. Published in 2008, I assume I bought it from a book sale some time ago **

Amy Pearson’s family is desperately poor – even by the standards of Edwardian Liverpool – but they have each other. Until Amy is torn from her home by her rich aunt, a woman obsessed by religion and snobbery who wants a girl she can mould as she wishes. Clever and pretty, ten-year-old Amy is perfect for her purposes. It is the beginning of a long journey for Amy, as she desperately searches for the family she lost, and a home where she can be free at last from her aunt’s possessive tyranny. But she will have to endure a forced marriage and a tragic war before she can at last find what she seeks.

Happy reading!

The Reckoning (Secrets of Redemption Book 5) by Michele PW (Pariza Wacek)

The Reckoning (Secrets of Redemption Book 5)

by Michele PW (Pariza Wacek)

The Reckoning is another excellent read in the Secrets of Redemption series. It is the second book centred around Charlie’s story and it answers a lot of questions!

Another book full of suspense and tension. I can’t seem to get enough of this series. I’m already reading book 6! I look forward to picking my kindle back up each evening to see what might happen next.

It’s a long time since I read a series of books one after the other, but I am really invested in these characters and their stories.

I.C.Y.M.I

https://chataboutbooks.blog/2024/04/11/it-began-with-a-lie-secrets-of-redemption-book-1-by-michele-pw-pariza-wacek-michelepw/

https://chataboutbooks.blog/2024/04/11/this-happened-to-jessica-a-psychological-suspense-mystery-secrets-of-redemption-book-2-by-michele-pw-pariza-wacek-michelepw/

https://chataboutbooks.blog/2024/05/01/the-evil-that-was-done-secrets-of-redemption-book-3-by-michele-pw-pariza-wacek-michelepw/

https://chataboutbooks.blog/2024/05/08/the-summoning-secrets-of-redemption-book-4-by-michele-pw-pariza-wacek/

Happy reading!

Lisbon ’41: Amongst the spies and the intrigue of wartime Lisbon lies a deadly secret. (The Lisbon Novels Book 1) by Malcolm Havard @MalHavardWriter #NewSeries #BookPromotion @BoBookPublicity

ONLY 3 WEEKS UNTIL….

Lisbon ’41: Amongst the spies and the intrigue of wartime Lisbon lies a deadly secret. (The Lisbon Novels Book 1)

by Malcolm Havard

Wartime Lisbon. Ex-cop, Dinis Lopes just wants to be left alone. The state has other ideas…

A VIP visitor to Portugal has left behind a deadly secret that can change the course of history. Lopes is tasked with finding it – without knowing what he’s looking for.

” A little bit Gamache. A little bit Frost. A little bit Wallander. And I can’t wait for the sequel.” ARC reviewer.

PRE-ORDER NOW!

The Summoning (Secrets of Redemption Book 4) by Michele PW (Pariza Wacek) 

The Summoning (Secrets of Redemption Book 4)

by Michele PW (Pariza Wacek) 

The Summoning is another excellent book in this brilliant series. This one is a prequel, so I got to learn more about Aunt Charlie and how she ended up in Redemption. Just brilliant!

I’m thoroughly enjoying spending time with these characters!

I’m already reading book 5!

New to the series?

Happy reading!

No One Saw a Thing by Andrea Mara @AndreaMaraBooks

No One Saw a Thing

by Andrea Mara 

WOW! I feel quite exhausted after reading this book. Talk about a rollercoaster of emotions!

This was my absolute biggest fear when my children were little. I was hyperventilating on behalf of Sive. How she doesn’t completely fall apart during this ordeal I don’t know, although rationally I know that wouldn’t help anyone. Such a frightening scenario, I can only imagine. I felt tense throughout this book, and as the story progressed I found myself trying to read quicker but at the same time not wanting to discover anything even more traumatic.

I couldn’t warm to Sive’s husband, Aaron, even though she seems to idolise him. I found his friendship group quite bizarre. Almost like they were forcing themselves to still be friends even though they no longer seemed to have anything in common. Kind of like their get togethers were just a habit now. One that no one dared to be the first to break. None of them are particularly likable characters (apart from Sive). I’d like to say I warmed to them a bit more as we get to know them, but no.

So much goes on in such a short time, my head was spinning! This is a fast-paced, suspenseful, and emotional story with many jaw dropping moments. I absolutely loved it!

** I read this book as part of a buddy read with a group of Bookstagram friends. I read the hardcover edition which I purchased from a second-hand book sale **

Treat yourself

Happy reading!

#FlashbackFriday May 2024

Hi, and welcome to my Flashback Friday feature!

On the first Friday of each month, I like to look back at the books I was reading the previous year during the same month.

Please do join in if you have the time, I’d love to see your posts 🙂

A big thank you to those who already join in regularly! xx

Here are my reviews from May 2023 + a link to previous May FBFs….

happy reading!

As Good As Dead: Book 3 (A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder) by Holly Jackson @HoJay92

As Good As Dead: Book 3 (A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder)

by Holly Jackson

I have absolutely LOVED this book!

I finished it this afternoon as part of a buddy read with Bookstagram friends and I’m looking forward to chatting about it with them, although I’m not sure where to start to be honest.

I was completely invested in Pip and Ravi’s story since reading, and thoroughly enjoying, the first two books in this series so I was very much looking forward to reading book three. I think I’d go as far to say as this is even better than the first two books put together. My heart was in my mouth for much of this book. It is so full of jaw dropping twists. I actually felt myself panicking at times.

This book is fast paced, suspenseful, full of wonderful relationships and solid friendships integral to the story line.

The very last page gave me goosebumps!

Pip and Ravi are just the best characters. I’m sad to be saying goodbye to them.

This is YA fiction at its very best.

I can’t recommend this series highly enough.

ICYMI….

https://chataboutbooks.blog/2023/10/19/a-good-girls-guide-to-murder-a-good-girls-guide-to-murder-book-1-by-holly-jackson-hojay92a/

https://chataboutbooks.blog/2024/03/26/good-girl-bad-blood-a-good-girls-guide-to-murder-book-2-by-holly-jackson-hojay92/

Happy reading!