~ Alis Page, Reviewer, 5*
Thursday, 11 September 2025
Daughter of Mercia Dr Anna Petersen Mysteries #1 by Julia Ibbotson
~ Alis Page, Reviewer, 5*
Saturday, 30 August 2025
The Country Village Allotment by Cathy Lake
A heartwarming and uplifting summer story for fans of Heidi Swain and Phillipa Ashley, by the author of The Country Village Christmas Show, The Country Village Summer Fete and The Country Village Winter Wedding.
At eighty-two years old Zelda Grey is tired. Tired of how much slower she is physically and mentally. Tired of technology. Tired of being alone since her beloved cat, Flint, died just before Christmas. And tired of life. The only thing that brings Zelda joy these days is her allotment in the gorgeous village of Little Bramble, where she has lived her whole life, and her three cranky goats.
Widow Mia Holmes always loved visiting Little Bramble Allotment with her husband, Gideon. But since his death she can't motivate herself. Despite putting on a brave face for her three sons and four grandchildren, she's reached breaking point, and isn't sure she can carry on.
And history teacher Liz Carter thought she had it all. The perfect job, perfect boyfriend in Rhodri and the perfect wedding to plan. Until she found Rhodri in bed with the neighbour. Holed up in her sister's box room she wonders how it all went so wrong. As she wallows in her misery, her sister takes her in hand and drags her to Little Bramble Allotment and suddenly she discovers the wonders of planting, growing and getting her hands dirty.
In an increasingly lonely world, these three women strike up an unlikely friendship and find that community, female friendship and the wonders of nature can truly be powerful healers.
Review
This is a typical feel-good story where the characters face different challenges but come together to find peace and healing.
I really enjoyed this novel; it helped immensely that the narrator was Julie Teal, who has a particularly soothing voice, which made listening to this book an absolute pleasure. The story itself is about three women, all in different stages of life, and all suffering from loss and looking for a way to go forward with their lives. When the three women become friends, their lives take on new meaning, and all three of them begin to live again.
The restorative power of friendship has been wonderfully depicted, and this is a story that leaves you with a feel-good feeling once you have finished, not to say there isn't a lot of drama before we get to that lovely conclusion, because there certainly is!
The character development is wonderfully depicted, and these characters are very relatable. I have to say I am fondest of Zelda, who has perhaps the most heartbreaking story of all of them.
I really enjoyed this novel, and I will certainly be reading more books from this author.
I loaned this novel from Borrow Box.
Sunday, 24 August 2025
Scents of Lavender: Queer Love Through the Ages – In Verse by D. C. Wilkinson
Timeless and unwavering, love flows through a universal melody that echoes in every corner of the globe. Transcending borders and cultures, it sows the seeds of memories that sprout and blossom in Scents of Lavender, a collection of 25 illustrated poems that breathe life into evocative scenes where queer love proudly re-emerges from the depths of history, uncovering deep and everlasting bonds.
Each poem invites the reader to explore the narrator’s deeply personal and intimate perspective through pantheistic eyes. Written in the first person, every verse unfolds as both a reflection and a manifestation of a single universal mind and soul, drawing the reader into a shared understanding that love –in all its forms– is boundless, eternal, and permeates the cosmos.
Monday, 28 July 2025
Thursday, 17 July 2025 Book Review - 5 STARS - A Scottish Shield Maiden (Scotlanders - Mythic Clans) by Heide Middlebrook
(Scotlanders - Mythic Clans)
By Heide Middlebrook
Thursday, 17 July 2025
Book Review - 5 STARS - The Trials of Arthur Whitty by Tim Walker
By Tim Walker
This novella is the story of plain old Arthur Whitty, a man whose dreams are never dull and whose vivid imagination and sense of humour carries him through a series of sometimes challenging situations. Arthur has retired to a pair of slippers and jigsaw table in a quiet cul-de-sac in Berkshire, England. He walks his dog, Max, and lets his mind wander to a series of dreams in which he is more daring, skilful and adventurous that his real-life humdrum self. He is an irritant to his orderly wife, Emilia, and has succumbed to irksome cancer treatment following a run-in with skin cancer.
Once a date has been set for corrective surgery, Arthur sets his mind on organising a real-life adventure – a bucket list trip to Machu Picchu in Peru where he finds peace and a calming of the spirit. Arthur’s bullish nature carries him through a series of situations but there is little the retired couple can do about the onset of dementia. But Arthur is well supported by Emilia and their daughter, Holly, as the family rally round to make his declining years as comfortable as possible. And there’s always escape to his secret world of risk, responsibility and danger.
The author has drawn on personal experience and observations of elderly men in a support group he helps run for Men’s Matters charity in Windsor, Berkshire. Half of all royalties from the sales of this book will be donated to Men’s Matters, who support older men by encouraging social interaction and connecting them to health and wellbeing support services.
Arthur Whitty is a brave adventurer, spy, rally driver, vampire hunter and all-around great guy. Well, he got the great guy part right! Reaching retirement, Arthur struggles to adapt to being at home all the time, as does his wife to a certain extent. He now spends his days with his wife, dog and occasionally his daughter, and of course an abundance of jigsaw puzzles! But, in his other life, his imaginative life, he can be anything he wants to be. However, after all those years of work, his retirement has come with challenges as his health rapidly declines. After surviving cancer, he is determined to have one last adventure and he chooses to go alone to Machu Picchu in Peru, where somehow he still manages to get himself in trouble - but at least he has ticked it off his bucket list.
Arthur is a really likeable character, he is funny, witty, and utterly endearing. But as dementia robs him of his memories he struggles to hold onto who he is.
This novel is very moving, especially as Arthur is just so likeable. I will certainly be checking out more books by this author in the future.
This novel is available on Amazon
Tim Walker
Tim Walker is an independent author living near Windsor in the UK. Born in Hong Kong in the Sixties, he grew up in Liverpool where he began his working life as a trainee reporter on a local newspaper. He went on to attain an honours degree in Communication Studies in South Wales before moving to London where he worked in the newspaper publishing industry for ten years.
In the mid-90s he opted to spend a couple of years doing voluntary work in Zambia through VSO, running an educational book publishing development programme. After this, he set up his own marketing and publishing business in Lusaka, Zambia’s capital, then managed a mineral exploration company before returning to the UK in 2009.
His creative writing journey began in earnest in 2014, as a therapeutic activity whilst recovering from cancer treatment. In addition to short stories, he researched and wrote a five-book historical fiction series, A Light in the Dark Ages. The series connects the end of Roman Britain to the story of Arthur in an imaginative narrative. It starts with Abandoned, then Ambrosius: Last of the Romans; Uther’s Destiny; Arthur Dux Bellorum and Arthur Rex Brittonum, the last two books charting the life of an imagined historical King Arthur.
More recently, he has written a dual timeline historical novel set at Hadrian’s Wall, Guardians at the Wall. His two books of short stories, Thames Valley Tales and London Tales combine contemporary and historical themes and are now available as audiobooks. Somewhere along the way, he co-authored a three-book children’s series with his daughter, Cathy, The Adventures of Charly Holmes.
Thank you for reading The Trials of Arthur Whitty. Please leave a star rating and review on Amazon and/or Goodreads so others can benefit from your experience.
Tim’s Amazon author page www.author.to/TimWalkerWrites
Goodreads: www.goodreads.com/author/show/678710.Tim_Walker
Tim’s website: www.timwalker1666.wixsite.com/website
Facebook Page: www.facebook.com/TimWalkerWrites
Instagram: www.instagram.com/timwalker1666
X (Twitter): www.twitter.com/timwalker1666
TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@timwalker804
BlueSky: www.bsky.app/profile/timwalker1666.bsky.social
Monday, 14 July 2025
I am excited to be hosting the blog tour for A Prodigy in Auschwitz: Simon (A Holocaust Story, Book #1) by Fred Raymond Goldman #AProdigyInAuschwitz #FredRaymondGoldman #HistoricalFiction #WWII #Auschwitz #BlogTour
A Prodigy in Auschwitz: Simon
(A Holocaust Story, Book #1)
By Fred Raymond Goldman
Publisher: Historium Press
Pages: 368
When Nazi Germany troops enter Krakow, Poland on September 2, 1939, fourteen-year-old Simon Baron learns two truths that have been hidden from him.
One, the people who have raised him are not his biological parents. Two, his birth mother was Jewish. In the eyes of the Germans, although he has been raised Catholic, this makes Simon Jewish. Simon's dreams of becoming a concert violinist and composer are dashed when his school is forced to expel him, and he is no longer eligible to represent it at its annual Poland Independence Day Concert. There, he had hoped to draw the attention of representatives of a prestigious contest who might have helped him fulfill his dreams.
Simon vows to never forgive his birth father for abandoning him, an act resulting in unspeakable tragedies for his family and in his being forced to live the indignities of the ghetto and the horrors of Auschwitz and Sachsenhausen concentration camps.
Throughout his ordeals, Simon wavers between his intense anger toward his birth father and his dreams of being reunited with him. Through his relationships with Rabbi Rosenschtein and the rabbi's daughter, Rachel, Simon comes to appreciate his Jewish heritage and find purpose in his life. Driven by devotion to family and friends and his passion for music, Simon holds on to hope. But can he survive the atrocities of the Nazi regime?
How do you reconcile a decision you made in the past when the world erupts in war, threatening the life of someone you love and believe you were protecting?
Excerpt
Simon braced himself for what was coming.
The rector cleared his throat, stood, and walked back and forth before them with his hands behind his back. His voice seemed apologetic when he stopped and said, “The Nazis are insisting we expel our Jewish students. The ones who came here told me they are forcing all other conservatories and universities throughout Poland to do the same. If we don’t conform, they’ll close the school.”
Simon’s chest tightened. He slowly shook his head in disbelief. A slight noise rose from his throat. He fought an impulse to leap from his chair and swipe his arm across the rector’s desk, letting the items scatter across the floor. To control himself, he squeezed his hands more tightly onto the arms of his chair. He looked at Professor Kaminski again for support. There was a look of helplessness on her face, a look of sympathy for what he must be feeling. He had grown to respect and love her dearly. The thought of losing her as his teacher devastated him.
His father raised his voice. “So, what are you saying? You’re expelling Simon?”
“It’s most unfortunate, but the Germans have tied our hands. I’m afraid the answer is yes.”
“When will this expulsion take place?”
The rector looked down and lowered his voice. “Immediately, I’m afraid.”
Simon’s face reddened. “Does this mean I can’t represent the school at the Independence Day Concert?”
The rector stroked his forearm. “I’m sorry, son. I have no choice.” The rector turned to Simon’s parents. In a gentle tone, he said, “I want to repeat, Mr. and Mrs. Baron, we have the highest regard for Simon. It distresses us to have to take this action.” No one responded. The meeting ended with everyone looking dejected and unable to find the right words to say.
Professor Kaminski and Simon walked quietly to his classrooms to collect his belongings. Other students passed Simon and nodded. Simon’s eyes averted theirs. When Simon finished, Professor Kaminski walked him to his parents. On the way she stopped, faced him, and placed her hands on his shoulders. “You’re a fine violinist, Simon,” she said. “You must never forget that. This war will be over one day, and you will resume your studies here, I hope. In the meantime, hold your head high, and keep practicing and composing. I’ll want to hear your compositions when we meet again.” They hugged each other. Simon bit his lip to hold back his tears.
Simon and his parents walked out the front door of the school with their shoulders slumped and their heads down. His father attempted to put his arm around Simon’s shoulder. Simon brushed it away and walked home ahead of his parents.
Once home, Simon retreated to his room and slammed the door. He threw his backpack on the floor and fell into his bed, stomach first. He hid his face in his pillow and cried.
Daughter of Mercia Dr Anna Petersen Mysteries #1 by Julia Ibbotson
Daughter of Mercia Dr Anna Petersen Mysteries #1 By Julia Ibbotson Publication Date: June 6th, 2025 Series: Dr Anna Petersen Mysteries Publi...

-
Tho I Be Mute By Heather Miller Home. Heritage. Legacy. Legend. In 1818, Cherokee John Rid...
-
A Ha’penny Will Do By Alison Huntingford Love, dreams and destitution. Three members of one family are linked by their struggle to survive...
-
Um, yes I did! I am a little upset today. I had an author accuse me of not reading her book because my review was too short. Um, excuse me...