Interview with Scott Innes on Galactic Keegan

Interview with Scott Innes on Galactic Keegan

‘The near future. Earth has been invaded by the L’zuhl, an aggressive, imperialistic alien race who have laid waste to the galaxy for centuries. The few human survivors have been evacuated to the farthest reaches of space to rebuild and fight back against the L’zuhl onslaught. There, on the distant planet of Palangonia, in a large, walled compound that houses the new human colony, lives the former Newcastle United and England boss Kevin Keegan, now manager of Palangonia FC.

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Ash Mountain by Helen Fitzgerald

Ash Mountain by Helen Fitzgerald

Helen Fitzgerald’s third novel, ‘Ash Mountain’, blends powerful action with deep and painful emotion. The book tracks the poisonous effects of hidden corruption, invisible but deadly, over thirty years. To tell Fran’s story, Fitzgerald expertly juggles three time periods; the day of a cataclysmic natural disaster, the days leading up to it and Fran’s fifteenth year.

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One Year of Ugly by Caroline MacKenzie

 One Year of Ugly by Caroline MacKenzie

No-one is a mystery to their beautician. Working in the glamour industry will teach you more about personality and motivation than any academic study. I’d love to tell the story of Troy from the point of view of the slave girl who threaded Helen’s eyebrows, describe the Napoleonic wars in the voice of Josephine’s maid or describe the challenges facing Lady Macbeth’s manicurist. ‘Out, out, damned liver spot!’

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Separation Anxiety by Laura Zigman

Separation Anxiety by Laura Zigman

I enjoyed Separation Anxiety throughout, but it was only when I arrived at the book’s finale that I came to appreciate its true quality. While reading the first few chapters, I found Judy, the main character, a trifle annoying. An author suffering from writer’s block, she is warm, funny and open-hearted, but if, like me, you suffer from stiff-upper-lip syndrome, also a tad irritating until you allow yourself to get on her wavelength.

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Happy Family by James Ellis

Happy Family by James Ellis

Germaine Kiecke, an art critic and broadcaster, is the lead character in this well-crafted and thought-provoking novel. Or, is she? Several characters reflect different facets of the story, so reading it feels like walking in a portrait gallery, or flicking through a graphic novel. Because Germaine’s childhood was destroyed by vindictive abusers, she learned early in life how to escape from reality into fantasy. She has difficulty in sustaining relationships, and fails to ‘articulate the images in her mind’. Her live-in lover has moved out, and she leads a solitary but contented existence, finding comfort in playing ‘Happy Family’, an augmented reality game, because ‘inside the bubble was better than outside’.

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From the Type Face #1

From the Type Face #1

I hope 2020 is bringing you good health, terrific books to read and brilliant writing opportunities. I’ve chosen to focus my time and energy on the areas where I already have a toe-hold, humorous writing and book blogging, so I don’t enter writing competitions. However, I know many of my contacts like to take part in short story, flash fiction and novel events, and some of them have won prestigious prizes. Here’s a link to a great free source of competition opportunities.

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Death Deserved by Thomas Enger and Jorn Lier Horst, translated by Anne Bruce

Death Deserved by Thomas Enger and Jorn Lier Horst, translated by Anne Bruce

Created by two Scandinavian crime writers working in tandem for the first time, translated in Scotland and edited in London, ‘Death Deserved’ was always going to be an exciting cultural mash-up. However, the finished novel is so much more than that. The genre of Nordic Noir may raise expectations of body parts scattered randomly across bleak landscapes, but the intricate plot of ‘Death Deserved’ is set in locations that are varied and vividly described. Brilliant plotting and superbly controlled language make this book as mentally challenging as it is thrilling…

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The Introvert and The Introvert Confounds Innocence by Michael Paul Michaud

The Introvert and The Introvert Confounds Innocence by Michael Paul Michaud

I read both of these novellas within twenty-four hours. Although I enjoy reading fast for recreation, when I set out to review a book, I always take it slowly and make copious notes as I go along. This time, that’s how I began, until I realised that my method didn’t match the stories. Going with the flow is the best way to appreciate Michaud’s brilliant use of first-person narration, including a repetition of key phrases, which create humour in what would otherwise be a dark tale.

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You Beneath Your Skin by Damyanti Biswas

You Beneath Your Skin by Damyanti Biswas

This is my very first blog tour with Anne Cater, whose team I’m very proud to join, and I’m delighted to begin with a story that touched my heart - You Beneath Your Skin by Damyanti Biswas.

Lies, ambition, family are the words used on the cover to define this book. All three are accurate, but there is much more to the story Damyanti Biswas tells so movingly. On the very first page, the reader is catapulted into a distressing situation, when the protagonist’s young son, who has special needs, goes missing, and she is forced to call on her diverse extended family to help her locate him.

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The Day Jack Sacked His Therapist by Marie Gameson

The Day Jack Sacked His Therapist by Marie Gameson

When your therapist is your sister, how can you sack her? That is the intriguing question posed by Marie Gameson’s witty tale of City broker Jack, whose tragic childhood has turned him into an all-purpose scapegoat. Because of a mystery connected with his mother’s early death, Jack shows all the signs of being cursed, leading others to see their own demons in him. Although Jill, his well-meaning sibling, keeps telling Jack that nobody blames him for whatever happened to their mother, it is obvious from the start of the novel that he feels weighed down by all the problems of the world.

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Self Publishing & I - Chapter 1

Self Publishing & I - Chapter 1

Welcome to my new blog, ‘Self-Publishing and I’, which will record my experiences as I attempt to self-publish a first novel on Amazon. I’m going to skip the traditional opening paragraph about having an idea for a crime story, jotting down my first ideas, three years of drafts and redrafts, the creative writing courses I took, my writing diploma from UEA, my supportive writing community on Twitter and a terrific professional edit. I’m sure this is a familiar journey to many…

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Something To Live For by Richard Roper

Something To Live For by Richard Roper

A funeral marks the end of a life, but it makes a fine beginning to a story. Richard Roper opens his moving and humorous novel, ‘Something to Live For’, with a funeral where there’s only one mourner. Working for the local council in the Death Administration department, it’s Andrew’s job to search through the belongings of people who have died alone, seeking funds to cover funeral expenses, as well as contact details for family and friends. If he finds neither, Andrew has to arrange a Public Health funeral. These are not as uncommon as you might think. In the UK, local authorities spent £5,382,379 on public health funerals in the 12 months up to April 2018.

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Nightingale Point by Luan Goldie

Nightingale Point by Luan Goldie

A single dreadful event, on a summer day in 1996, changes the lives of the inhabitants of a city tower block forever. Some of the residents have been living as strangers in neighbouring apartments for decades, others are connected by long gone family traumas and their continual struggle to ‘get by’. No-one affected by the disaster will ever be the same again.

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Happiness by Aminatta Forna

Happiness by Aminatta Forna

Attila, a Ghanaian psychiatrist visiting London to deliver a conference keynote speech, is an internationally respected expert on PTSD. Jean, an American, is a biologist, studying urban foxes on a short-term EU contract. They bump into each other, literally, on Waterloo Bridge in London. By coincidence, they meet again a few hours later, through their joint efforts to help a homeless man and his dog. After that, the two strangers go for a drink and their stories begin to intertwine.

Personally, I was more drawn to Attila, ‘a man so tall he appeared to be wading through the crowd’. His physical stature is matched by his big heart. When it becomes clear that he must take responsibility, not only for finding his missing niece and her child but also for rescuing his former lover, Attila steps up without hesitation. A childless widower, he is alone in life through circumstance, not by choice. In spite of, or perhaps because of, the horrors he has witnessed in theatres of war, he loves to laugh and passionately enjoys the good things of life. He relishes flavours, and asks to be seated close to the kitchen in restaurants, so that he can enjoy the appearance and smells of the dishes being carried past. Whenever an opportunity offers, he dances.

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A Knife to the Heart by Barbara Nadal

A Knife to the Heart by Barbara Nadal

Forty years on, a wealthy but broken family must relive the dreadful events surrounding a young married woman’s alleged suicide. Although Cetin Ikmen has retired from the Istanbul police force, he is persuaded to investigate this not-so-cold case. A historian has discovered, in a ruined seaside villa, the Ouija board that predicted the bride, Deniz, would be the first of those present to die.  While Ikmen delves deeper and deeper into the circumstances surrounding her violent death, both past and present are obscured and illuminated by dynamics motivating the surviving relatives.

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