Thursday, 16 February 2017

WRAP-UP: January 2017


Another month, a new wrap-up! I am very proud of how many books I’ve read this month, I’ve made a big dent in my 2017 popsugar reading challenge and I’ve thoroughly enjoyed all the books I’ve read. Here’s a quick run-through of what they were. There’s links to all my reviews on tumblr too, as that’s where I’ve started posting them.




★★★★★
Holly’s New Year’s Eve story started me off, and perfectly ended the Spinster Club series. I still have one book in the series to read, but I didn’t mind skipping ahead so that I could read this book at the time of year it was intended. I love Holly’s books and this was even better, I love a short and sweet read. This was my a book set around a holiday other than Christmas.


I love John Cleese, especially Fawlty Towers and Monty Python. I got this as an audiobook because I wanted to hear this voice rather than trying to conjure it up in my head. And that made it so much better. There’s really no other way to read an autobiography than by having the audiobook. I really enjoyed this book, and learning about John’s life. This was my an audiobook.


★★★★★
I bought this on sale in Waterstones just after Christmas, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Because it’s mostly short quotes, I devoured this in a day and it had me laughing out loud with how accurate it was of Brits Abroad. I can’t wait for my next holiday just to do all these things. This was my a book about travel.


★★★★★
After reading Me Before You last year, I have become a massive Jojo Moyes fan. This book was set in both 1916 and 2006, through the eyes of Sophie and Liv. Their lives become intertwined through a war painting that Liv may have taken from her and given to Sophie’s descendants. I loved this book, the contrast in the two stories was beautifully moving, and once I got into it I couldn’t put it down. This was my a book set in two different time periods.


★★★★★
Joe Lycett is one of my favourite comedians, and not just because he comes from Birmingham, though I do love a comedian whose jokes are from places I know. This book complies many of his stand up email routines, from reversing a parking fine to pretending to be Angela Merkel. I really enjoyed this book as it reads just like his jokes. This was my a book of letters, as there are letters, emails and tweets.


★★★★★
This is my mom’s book, and since I read a Jenny Colgan book around Christmastime I’ve decided I want to read more of her books. This is about a girl called Polly who files for bankruptcy and moves to a small seaside town to start afresh, and ends up opening a very successful bakery. I took this to Torquay with me, and even though it was the off-season I could still picture the scenes of the book using this seaside landscape. I really enjoyed it, my favourite part being Neil the Puffin, of course, and I’m definitely going to read more of her books this year. This was my a book about food.


★★★★★
This was the first book I’ve borrowed from a library since my university days! I love libraries so I finally joined Solihull library to get more books and hopefully save a little money from buying so many all the time. Animal Farm is a classic story of animals overthrowing humans, the pigs telling all the farm animals that all animals are equal but then slowly taking charge over the new farm. I can see why so many people have read this. It was short, but really thought-provoking at the same time. This was my a book from a genre/subgenre you’ve never heard of (paranoid fiction) which is in the advanced section of the challenge.


★★★★★
This is the second book in Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events. In this story, the Baudelaire orphans are sent to like with their Uncle Monty, a scientist who studies snakes and has a large collection of them. Everything is going well until he hires an assistant who looks exactly like Count Olaf, the horrible man trying to steal their fortune. I read this as my book by an author who uses a pseudonym (Lemony Snicket is actually a man called Daniel Handler). I’m currently reading these to refresh my memory for the Netflix series starring Neil Patrick Harris.


★★★★★
Wing is a half-Ghanian, half-Chinese girl who lives in America. Her family are funny, loving and cramped in their small flat. When her brother ends up in the hospital, the family struggles to pay the medical bills, and Wing wants to find a way to chip in. It turns out that she is an incredible runner and could make a living from this. I read this as my book where the main character is a different ethnicity than you. Such a stunning debut.


★★★★
If you loved Wonder, the story of Auggie Pullman starting a new school where he looks vastly different from all the other kids, then you will love this. Three novellas from the perspectives of three different children in Auggie’s life. The bully, the best friend, and the welcome buddy. They all offer different perspectives of how they see Auggie, and what Auggie’s relationship with them is. A very beautiful book, and even better as an audiobook. This was my a book by or about a person who has a disability.


The Wide Window by Lemony Snicket
★★★★★
This is the third book in the A Series of Unfortunate Events series, and this time the orphans are going to stay with their Aunt Josephine. This woman is afraid of many things, but apparently not afraid of falling in love with strange men who resemble Count Olaf. This was my book you loved as a child.


Fluke by James Herbert
★★★★
I have always loved the film Fluke, and this month I finally decided to read the book as my book from a nonhuman perspective. The book follows a dog who is desperate to find out what happened to him before he become a dog, as he has some memories of his life as a human.

I really enjoyed all of the books that I read this month, I ticked 12 prompts off my reading challenge, including one advanced prompt. In figures, I read 3,488 pages in 31 days, which averages to 112 pages a day. It was a great start to the year and I hope I can continue this pace.

Tuesday, 3 January 2017

New year, new reads

Happy New Year everyone!

This is just a quick check in to let you know that I am going to be attempting the 2017 pop sugar reading challenge! I have most of the prompts planned out, as as of today, I have already completed three of them. I’ll be mentioning what prompts I have completed in my monthly wrap-ups, and exceptional books I’ve read will also be reviewed separately.

See you soon!


Friday, 1 July 2016

WRAP-UP: May and June

I’m a little behind on my blogging - and my reading - at the moment, so in order to catch-up I’ve decided to put May and June’s wrap up posts together. I didn’t read much in June anyway unfortunately, but I hope to pick it back up again in July.



May

Am I Normal Yet? by Holly Bourne
this book will bring out your inner feminist and leave you kicking and screaming against inequality! absolutely loved Holly’s first book in the spinster club series ★★★★★

I’ll Give You The Sun by Jandy Nelson
I didn’t like this book at first but it grew on me towards the end. The story of two twins who are split apart by tragedy and have to find their way back to each other emotionally ★★★★

Everything, Everything by Nicola Yoon
it shows how good this book was, it only took me one day to read it! such a wonderful book about illness and love ★★★★★

For Holly by Tanya Byrne
I didn’t love this book, but I didn’t hate it either. Lola spends her summer in Paris with her father and new stepmother, and witnesses a terrible accident ★★★

The Unexpected Everything by Morgan Matson
a lovely summer read with plenty of fluffy friends! ★★★★

Mystery and Mayhem by The Crime Club (Katherine Woodfine and friends)
a beautiful compilation of stories from the best children’s mystery writers around today! including one of my favourites, Robin Stevens ★★★★

Paris for One by Jojo Moyes
a lovely short story to read in a day, about a girl trying to be more impulsive by taking a spur of the moment trip to Paris - for fans of Me Before You ★★★★★

The Princess Saves Herself In This One by Amanda Lovelace
a thought-provoking book of poetry ★★★★

Love Bomb by Jenny McLachlan
Betty relies on letters from her dead mother to help her understand growing up and falling in love ★★★

How Not To Disappear by Clare Furniss
such an emotional read from start to finish, I really enjoyed it ★★★★

So in the month of May, I read 10 books, which amounted to 3,290 pages, so over 30 days I averaged a total of 106 pages a day! This is amazing for me, May was such a good reading month and I was so proud of myself. But then June came and I read far, far less.

June

Inferno by Cat Doyle
the Falcone boys are back and are causing more trouble than ever - I absolutely loved this and I can’t wait for the final instalment of the series! ★★★★★

The Boy Most Likely To by Huntley Fitzpatrick
a heartwarming story about recovery and love ★★★★★

Summer Days and Summer Nights - Stephanie Perkins and friends
a beautiful summer anthology of love stories, with some of the best teen romance writers around today ★★★★★

The Girl of Ink and Stars by Kiran Millwood Hargrave
I read this for the UKYA book club, but it just wasn’t for me. I felt there was too much going on to really enjoy it ★★

First Class Murder by Robin Stevens
Robin has delivered yet another amazing murder mystery, this time on the Orient Express - can’t wait to read the next book! ★★★★★

I did say that this month was worse, and it was. In the 30 days of June, I read 5 books amounting 1,813 pages, which amounts to only 60 pages a day. I didn’t read as much as I thought I would this month, but on the bright side, I have read 40 books this year and completed by goodreads reading challenge! Let’s see how many more books I can finish with the second half of the year, no pressure this time.

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Thursday, 12 May 2016

WRAP-UP: April

April was a book-filled month, I read far, far more than I expected to and mostly stuck to my TBR! It’s helping that I’ve become so organised as I’m forcing myself to read books I’ve hoarded and haven’t picked up since I bought them.


Did I Mention I Love You? by Estelle Maskame
Eden goes to visit her estranged father in California for the summer, and gets into lots of trouble! Not a bad read, if you abandon all your morals ★★★★

Before I Die by Jenny Downham
Although I didn’t like Tessa’s character very much, her story of dying from leukaemia is heartbreakingly well-written ★★★

More Happy Than Not by Adam Silvera
A soul destroying story about a boy who just wants to forget - I can never look at a smiley face the same way again! ★★★★

The Sleeper and the Spindle by Neil Gaiman
A wonderfully well-written, and beautifully illustrated, fairy tale that I hope becomes a classic for the next generation ★★★★

Adulthood is a Myth by Sarah Andersen
These illustrations perfectly sum up what it’s like to be a young adult, specially a girl, who is struggling to grow up ★★★★★

Crush by Eve Ainsworth
This book, about abusive relationships, chilled me to the bone. Eve always chooses the difficult topics and handles them gently ★★★★

When We Collided by Emery Lord
As Jonah grieves the loss of his father, and attempts to hold his family together, larger-than-life Vivi appears to make things better ★★★★

House of Windows by Alexia Casale
15-year-old Nick has been accepted into Cambridge university - an under 18 in an over 18s world makes university a very different experience for him ★★★★

Geek Girl: Head Over Heels by Holly Smale
Another wonderful adventure from the Manners family, with my one wish answered - more of Wilber and his stylish, fairy godmother ways! ★★★★★

Me Before You by Jojo Moyes
A tragic story of a man who becomes disabled and loses his freedom, and the girl who accepts the job as his new carer ★★★★★

So somehow, whilst working 30+ hours a week and maintaining some semblance of a social life, I managed to read ten books. These amounted to 3,030 pages, which over 30 days of April means I somehow read at a pace of... 101 pages a day! I don’t know how I managed it. I’m so overwhelmingly proud of myself, and I’ve almost hit my goodreads target of 40 books, as at the end of April I was up to 25 books. Lets hope May is just as good!

Friday, 29 April 2016

REVIEW: Me Before You by Jojo Moyes

I read this book in anticipation of the film coming out in June, and it’s only made me even more excited to see it! I hope my boyfriend is prepared to hand me tissue after tissue in the cinema. I had to write this review the second I put the book down, I was so excited to tell everyone how much I loved it.


Louisa Clark was happy with her simple life, having never left her small hometown, and had no plans to change anything. She lived with her sister, her nephew, and her parents, and she had a boyfriend that she had been with for so long that she refused to admit that she may not love him anymore. But her whole life was turned upside down in the matter of one day, when the cafe she loved working in got shut down unexpectedly, forcing her to look for a new job.

Will Traynor was a successful businessman before a motorcycle accident ruined his life. He has lost full use of his legs, and the majority of his arms, he can no longer hold down his job or flat in London, and is destined to live out the rest of his life in a wheelchair. His independence has now been replaced by around-the-clock care, in the form of Nathan, his night-time carer.. and Lou, his new daytime carer.

Lou and Will take a while to get used to each other; Will finds her too chatty and she finds him rude. But eventually they fall into step with each other, and a beautiful friendship arises. Lou soon makes it her mission to teach Will how to live again, and to accept his new life as a quadriplegic.

I really enjoyed this book, the characters were so beautiful and the story touched me in a way that a book hasn’t for a long time. I wish there were more books like this, that make you think about what you would do in Lou or Will’s position. The film has an excellent cast, bringing together stars from Harry Potter, The Hunger Games and Game of Thrones, and I think it will do the book justice. 

A tragically beautiful read that I just couldn’t put down. ★★★★★

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