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Showing posts from August, 2014

A Night on the Orient Express by Veronica Henry

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Dear Readers, Just finished reading this wonderful book, couldn't put it down, finished it in one sitting. Veronica Henry has a new fan! Welcome on board the Orient Express! The famous Orient Express offers mystery and romance, it is the trip of a lifetime. What better way to travel to Venice! Each passenger has their own story to tell and a reason for being there. As the train travels from London to Venice, there will be revelations, drama and unforeseen gestures of love in all its forms. At the beginning of the novel there are many different characters that are introduced. Normally I do not like so many characters in a novel but this works, you get so drawn into their lives.  Veronica Henry tells four different stories of individuals and families who have their own  reasons for travelling in style to Venice.   Imogen is heading to Venice to collect a painting for her grandmother but there is a surprise in store for her.  Stephanie is travelling with her new partner, Si

The Man From Beijing by Henning Mankell

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Dear Reader, This is a stand-alone novel from the creator of the Wallander detective novels. This novel tells the tale of a horrific crime and a frightening killer. One cold January day the Police are called out to a small little village in the North of Sweden where they find victims of a savage murder. While the local Police struggle to finds clues or even a motive, the case attracts the attention of Birgitta Roslin, a Judge, whose mother grew up in the village. She comes across diaries from the house of one of the victims kept by Jan Andren, who is an immigrant ancestor of Birgitta’s. The diaries cover Andren’s time as a foreman on the building of the transcontinental railroad in America. Extended flashbacks chart the journey of, San, a railroad worker, who was kidnapped in China and shipped to America in 1863. After finding evidence linking the mysterious Chinese man to the Hesjovallen murders, Birgitta travels to Beijing, suspecting that the motive for the horrific crime is

The Real Thing by Catherine Alliott

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The Real Thing (1996) Tessa is heading off on the annual family holiday to the Scottish Highlands. She discovers that this year, Patrick - the artist she fell for when she was seventeen - is back from Italy. Back then her father, a vicar, had forbidden her from seeing Patrick and she then went on to marry David and have two children. But she has never forgotten Patrick. When David, a Barrister, returns to London early for work, Tessa has an accident and is forced to rest up at Patrick's mother's home. It seems that they may well be brought back together again. As Tessa faces up to whether she's with the right man, she goes from one crazy predicament to the next, with a lot of surprising announcements along the way. A glorious tale of love with hilarious dialogue.  Really enjoyed this book a great pick-me-up after a stressful day at work! 

An English Woman In New York by Anne- Marie Casey

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Really enjoyed this book. A charming debut from Anne-Marie Casey. It's almost like a grown up version of Sex And The City. The storyline grabs you from the first page so that you can't help but get hooked by each of the characters. This novel revolves around four woman who live in New York.  We have Lucy, Christy, Robyn and Julia. They each live very different lives but they all share one thing - the city that they live in.  Lucy is the first woman that we are introduced to in this novel, her husband has just lost his job and they have to move half way across the world from their sophisticated life in London to a small apartment in New York or Manhattan to be precise. Christy is married to a wealthy man, who is a lot older than she is. She wants to get along with her stepdaughter who can't seem to try and get on with her .But when she starts feeling things for the doorman she doesn't know what she wants anymore and starts questioning everything about her life.

Secrets From The Past by Barbara Taylor Bradford

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Just finished reading Secrets From The Past by Barbara Taylor Bradford. It has been awhile since I have read one of her books and I was intrigued by this book on the shelf. The last book I read by her was Letter From A Stranger which I loved but I must say I was a little disappointed with this one. This is a novel of deeply-buried secrets, passionate love, obsession and redemption.  Thirty-year old Serena Stone is a talented war photographer who has followed in her father's footsteps. But when he dies unexpectedly in France, she steps away from the war zone weary of years of danger. She decides to write her father's own story and approaches Harry Redford, his best friend and front line colleague. Harry wants her to go to Venice to take care of Zac North, her former lover, who has come out of Afghanistan suffering from mental and physical exhaustion. The scene shifts to Nice, where Serena reconnects with her older twin sisters, Cara and Jessica, at a villa inh

Book Review - Homecoming by Cathy Kelly

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Dear Reader, Welcome to my first book review blog – very exciting altogether! I am going to start off with a review of Cathy Kelly’s, Homecoming, which I hope you read. I really enjoyed it. Let me know what you think of it. Till next time, happy reading! Regards, Ailish Homecoming by Cathy Kelly Book Details Paperback; 432 pages Published September 16 th 2010 by HarperCollinsUK (First published 2010) Source: Library Home is where the heart is Four women. Four lives. One place they call home. We are introduced to Eleanor Levine who left Ireland years ago with just a suitcase and her mother's recipe book. And now, seventy years later, she returns from New York to Dublin's beautiful Golden Square heartbroken after the recent, sudden death of her husband. As she watches life unfold from her window, she is drawn into the lives of the women who live in the square. Beautiful actress Megan Bouchier had fame and success in her grasp - then sh