History of Wolves – Emily Fridlund

AuthorEmily Fridlund
Publisher W&N
Date22 February 2018
EditionPaperback
Pages288
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13‎978-1474602969

“Maybe if I’d been someone else I’d see it differently. But isn’t that the crux of the problem? Wouldn’t we all act differently if we were someone else?” (Quotation pos. 1939)

Content

Madelaine Furston, called Linda, grows up in a small cabin at a lake somewhere in the rural woods of northern Minnesota. Her parents, old hippies, treat her like an adult person, letting her make her own decisions and ideas about live. In school, they call her “freak”.

When she is fourteen, almost fifteen years old, everything changes. Across the lake, which is very narrow at this point, one late winter day a family from the city with a small child arrives at their new summerhouse. The father soon leaves but the mother and the little boy stay. Linda begins to visit and soon she is Paul’s babysitter and feels like a girl friend to his twentysix years old mother Patra. She seems to have found a happy family who cares. Linda feels that something changes when Patra’s husband Leo, a Christian Scientist, returns, but she could not explain what was wrong because Patra and Leo are still exceptionally friendly, making it easy to assume that they are happy and everything is fine.

Theme and Genre

This novel, shortlisted for the 2017 Man Booker Prize, is about the difference between a truth that you create for yourself and desperately want to believe, and a reality where you should act. Important topics are outsiders, family, growing up in the lonely nature, and the strong influence of religion.

Characters

The characters of this story are not always likeable and understandable in their behavior and thinking. Linda, who is trying to find out if she is still just a kid, longing for a real family, or a teenage girl with all her worries, trying too hard to be an adult. As an outsider, she is interested in the lives of other outsiders, pretending to understand what happiness in their lives or just making things up.

Plot and Writing

Madelaine “Linda”, now thirtyseven years old, tells the story of her childhood and youth as the first person narrator. Not always chronological, her memories switch between years and ages, persons, incidents, and some events that happened, and this leaves us readers with some loose ends and implausibilities. Delightful to read are the poetical descriptions of the nature, the lakes and woods, but tough, sad and sometimes depressing, when it comes to the dreams, invented stories and real living conditions of the female main characters.

Conclusion

An interesting, but not always plausible coming-of-age-story, a demanding read with only partly coherent figures, leaving the reader with some open questions.

Giovanni’s Room – James Baldwin

AuthorJames Baldwin
PublisherPenguin Classics
Date2 August 2007
EditionPaperback
Pages160
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-0141032948

„It became, in a way, every room I had ever been in and every room I find myself hereafter will remind me of Giovanni’s room.” (Quotation page 76)  

Content

David’s mother dies when he is only five years old and he grows up with his father and his aunt Ellen, the unmarried sister of his father. As soon as possible, he leaves and lives on his own. When he feels weary of every part of his life in New York, he moves to Paris, where he meets Hella. When he asks her to marry him, she leaves him, travels to Spain to think about her future. David stays in Paris. One evening he meets the bartender Giovanni, and from the first moment, there is a deep attraction between them. Giovanni lives in a small one-room-apartment and David moves in the same evening. When Hella comes back, David leaves Giovanni on that same day, pretending that this love affair never has happened.

Theme and Genre

This novel, written 1956, is about living between truth and lies, bisexuality, love, lost innocence, shame and guilt. An important topic for Baldwin’s persons is their search for their sexual identity and the related insecurity.

Characters

David, the young American, hides his feelings for men and feels sure about Hella, wants to marry, settle down and have children. His life is a perfect vision, created for the others, but a vision, he desperately tries to believe to be true. He knows that Hella will probably come back.

Giovanni is Italian, emotional and lives his feelings. That David, whom he trusts and loves, just leaves without a word destroys him.

Plot and Writing

David, the first person narrator tells the story during one night, and thinking about the next day, just in the present time. The first pages contain the whole story, revealing the major points, themes and conflict. Doing so, the author is free of any timeline and suspense level. The story moves between memories and significant events in David’s childhood, teenage years, and his years in Paris, and the hours of the present night and morning. A central point of the story is Guilleaume’s bar, a place for bohemians living their sexual diversity. Baldwin uses the scenes to describe a different live, working or without work at daytime, but waiting for the evenings and living during the night. He shows a very special picture of early Parisian mornings and the locations still open or just opening, for example the famous Les Halles.

Conclusion

Not always highly acclaimed by literary critics, this novel for a long time now is a timeless classic. Written with empathy and sensivity, in a poetic narrative language, the story gives many questions to reflect on them, about human life, decisions, possible guilt and fate.

Devotions, The Selected Poems of Mary Oliver

AuthorMary Oliver
PublisherPenguin Books
Date10 October 2017
EditionKindle edition
Pages477 (print-version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB01MZHR2P7

“Listen, are you breathing just a little, and calling it a life? / While the soul, after all, is only a window, / and the opening of the window no more difficult / than the wakening from a little sleep.” (Quotation from “Have you ever tried to enter the long black branches, pos. 2487)

Content

These more than two-hundred poems are a personal selection of her poems, selected by Mary Oliver herself. She begins with her latest collection, Felicity, 2015, followed by Blue Horses 2014, Dog Songs, 2013, A Thousand Mornings 2012, Swan, 2010, Evidence, 2009, The Truro Bear and Other Adventures, 2008, Red Bird, 2008, Thirst, 2006, New and Selected Poems, Volume Two, 2005, Blue Iris, 2004, Why I wake Early, 2004, Long Life, 2004, Owls and Other Fantasies, 2003, What do we know, 2002, The Leaf and the Cloud, 2000, West Wind, 1997, White Pine, 1994, New and Selected Poems: Volume One, 1992, House of Light, 1990, Dream Work, 1986, American Primitive, 1983, Three Rivers Poetry Journal, 1980, Twelve Moons, 1979, The River Styx, Ohio, 1972, and ends with her first poetry collection No Voyage and Other Poems, 1963 and 1965.

Theme and Writing

These poems are moments of observations and thoughts about nature, rivers, even stones, sun, snow, roses; we meet animals like foxes, horses, birds, especially herons, and her beloved dogs in her Dog Songs. Just simple moments, calm afternoons, evenings, sunny mornings in a quiet special surrounding of the beautiful nature and the poet wants to share these special moments, thoughts and feelings with us. Every single poem wants to show us the beauty of our world, to protect it and just enjoy every day of our life and be grateful for it.

Conclusion

“The poem is not the world. / It isn’t the first page of the world. / But the poem wants to flower, like a flower. / It knows that much. (Quotation from “Flare” 8., pos. 2361) These poems by Mary Oliver flower and touch our mind and souls.

The Forgotten Letters of Esther Durrant – Kayte Nunn

AuthorKayte Nunn
PublisherOrion
Date6 February 2020
EditionPaperback
Pages384
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-1409190561

“’Ex tenebris lux’, she read, running her fingers over the words. From the darkness into the light.” (Quotation page 356)

Content

When John Durrant takes his wife Esther on holiday in November 1951, she has to leave her son Teddy behind with his nanny and wonders, why they are visiting Cornwall and the rough, far away Isles of Scilly at this time of the year. At Embers Island, they meet Dr. Richard Creswell, an old friend of John, a psychiatrist with modern ideas about curing mental illnesses. But they did not come just for a visit; John leaves Esther in custody at the asylum, hoping that she might recover from her severe depression.

In spring 2018, her new research contract takes Rachel Parker, a thirty-five years old Australian research scientist, specialized on giant clams, from the South Pacific to the Scilly Isles, to study a special clam, Venus verrucosa. When she comes into a wild, raging storm, she is saved by Leah, an artist who lives at Little Embers. In an old suitcase, Rachel discovers six envelopes with touching love letters, all stamped but unsent, and with a name and address on it. She just wants to know, could she still find the recipient?

Theme and Genre

This novel, settled in the wild, beautiful nature surroundings of the Scilly Isles, is about traumas, traditional mental asylums, fate, family, but most of all it is about love.

Characters

We meet three very different women, Esther, Leah and Rachel, each one special and strong in her own way. Also the other characters are very well developed, realistic, believable and likeable.

Plot and Writing

The plot is told in two different alternating storylines, the first is about Esther’s life from November 1951 to spring 1952, the second story takes place in spring 2018. Memories that Esther shares with her granddaughter Eve, as they prepare Esther’s biography together, fill in about the years between. Impressing, vivid descriptions of the beautiful, outstanding nature complete the exciting storyline.

Conclusion

Romance, love and a gripping story, the outstanding surroundings and stunning seascapes of the Isles of Scilly, together with serious topics to think about and reflect, make this novel an interesting, impressive, uplifting, enjoyable read.

The Christmas Lights – Karen Swan

AuthorKaren Swan
PublisherPan Main Market Edition
Date1 November 2018
EditionPaperback
Pages480
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-1509838080

“You need to know that your worst moment can turn out to be your best. In every life, there is a defining moment of surrender where you must make a choice to let Destiny happen.” (Quotation page 421)

Content

Just from a scuba expedition on Upolu Island, Samoa, Bo Laxley and her boyfriend Zac Austen now arrive in Alesund, Norway, to pass December and a romantic Christmas in a rural farmhouse, hidden in the breathtaking nature of the fjord. Sharing their free-spirited, exciting life as “Wanderlusters” with more than nine million followers, every step is documented by their own photographer and manager Lenny, and now also Anna Rem, marketing head of Ridge Riders, the famous clothing brand sponsoring their stay in Norway. The price for this dream-come-true life is missing every possibility of privacy and private moments, but with Christmas coming nearer and the more Bo thinks about her daily life, she begins to doubt, if the price could be too high.

Theme and Genre

This Christmas story is about modern Social media, influencers, bringing their personal lives into the public, family, love, hidden secrets, heartbreak and, of course, about Christmas.

Characters

Bo knows that their followers need exciting, perfect pictures of her perfect days with her perfect boyfriend Zac and therefore every step of their risky trekking and climbing tours has to be well documented and immediately shared. As she longs for some privacy, Zac just does not understand her, he is happy with exactly how it is. Their host Signy, ninety-six-years old, after three years in Oslo, when she was young, had come back and never left again. In her opinion, there could be no life richer than hers, surrounded by the breathtaking beautiful nature.

Plot and Writing

The plot switches between two different storylines. The main story takes place in December 2018; meanwhile Signy’s story is set in summer 1936. The vivid description of spectacular Norwegian fjord landscape accompanies both strands. This book is an almost perfect Christmas read, full of love, snow, dark winter days and secrets hidden in a far away and nearer past. There are enough twists to keep the story interesting, but then Karen Swan in my opinion wanted too much, maybe searching for still more different themes and deepness, she brings not only one, but more hidden past dramas into the lifes of her main figures, and for me the story lost some plausibility and feels too intentionally constructed.

Conclusion

Enjoyable Christmas read, making us dream of romantic winter-days, hidden in the beautiful, snow-covered nature of Geirangerfjord.   

One Wish in Manhattan – Mandy Baggot

AuthorMandy Baggot
PublisherBookouture
Date2 October 2015
EditionKindle edition
Pages490 (print version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB013GSVDBW

“In just a few days, she and Angel would be leaving it all behind and travelling thousands of miles across the ocean for Christmas in the Big Apple. Minus temperatures in double figures and streets full of Santas, Michael Bublé music and candy canes.” (Quotation page 12)

Content

Haley Walker lives in Salisbury. Her dream was to become a designer with her own creations, but now, with twenty-eight years, she is a single mother and has just quit her job at a dry-cleaning firm. Her brother Dean, who lives in New York, has invited her and her nine-year-old daughter Angel for Christmas time.

Oliver Drummond of Drummond Global offices has never been fond of strategizing; he is a creator and makes things done.

When Haley and Oliver meet, the charismatic billionaire plays his usual “make a wish game”. Not at all impressed by his money, Haley tells him the secret wish of Angel, to meet her father, whom Haley ten years ago had met in New York, but after one night lost contact. Could Angel’s wish in magical, Christmassy New York come true?

Theme and Genre

This is a romantic, magical Christmas story about family, loss, friendship, love, and the hope and joy of Christmas, when wishes might come true.

Characters

All characters are loveable in their different ways, and special. Who would not like Angel, a funny, sometimes cheeky nine years old, who loves books and never leaves the house without her encyclopedia.

Plot and Writing

The story takes place at Christmas time in New York and has everything readers are looking for in a Christmas novel. Lively descriptions of festively decorated New York, snow-covered Manhattan, impressing skyscrapers, perfectly complete a plot, which shows the right balance between thoughtful and funny scenes.

Conclusion

A magical, cozy, heartwarming Christmas read, perfect for cuddling up in your armchair during this special time of the year.

Calling Mrs Christmas – Carole Matthews

AuthorCarole Matthews
PublisherSphere
Date24 October 2013
EditionPaperback
Pages480
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-0751545586

“When I think of all the things I’ve forced myself to do in the last few weeks, I’m just adoring the new, creative me!” (Quotation page 59)

Content

Cassie Smith has been redundant for almost a year now and with Christmas soon coming around she is worried how to get into the happy Christmas spirit when money is so short. Watching adverts on how to celebrate Christmas, she has the perfect idea: there must be people who needed help with all this and who are able to pay for the services rendered. Soon “Calling Mrs. Christmas” is going to be a huge success, many bookings coming in, including lots of baking done by her sister Gaby. When her most important client, the millionaire Carter Randall, invites her to accompany him and his to children on the trip to Lapland, she had organized for them, how could she say no?

Theme and Genre

A romantic Christmas fiction, this story mostly is about all the things needed for an almost perfect Christmas. The main topics are family, friendship, love, and choices that could change a life.

Characters

Cassie Smith loves all the Christmas preparations and is happy with her new business, which would make her a likeable person. On the other hand, she takes on far too much, as she is taken away by her new business. She also takes the help of Jim Maddison, her loving partner since five years, a nice guy who cares a lot, for granted.

Plot and Writing

The story takes place in Hemel Hempstead, during December, the few weeks before Christmas and is told by Cassie as first-person narrator. We read about her new work, the people she meets, about decorating trees, wrapping hundreds of presents, organizing parties and about the amazing Northern Lights in Lapland. There are funny parts, but also situations that make you think about, as Jim works as officer at the Bovingdale Young Offenders‘ Unit. Then, unfortunately, the story changes into something unrealistic, unbelievable, something near modern Cinderella.

Conclusion

Christmas fiction with some lengths, beginning with an entertaining plot that makes us thoughtful too. What follows are twists leading the story of Cassie into something near a modern Cinderella idea, for me too far from reality, almost losing the cozy touch of Christmassy magic, readers look for in a romantic Christmas novel.

Covent Garden in the Snow – Jules Wake

AuthorJules Wake
PublisherOne More Chapter
Date20 October 2017
EditionKindle
Pages481 (print version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB06XRFWHRZ

“From the end of November onwards, stepping out into Covent Garden is magical and as soon as December first hits, it’s positively enchanting.” (Citation page 167)

Content

Mathilde „Tilly“ Hunter loves her work as a make-up artist at London Metropolitan Opera and she is very talented and really qualified for her job.  But to get the career advancement she is hoping for, she needs to be familiar with modern technologies and computers und the new smart, attractive IT director Marcus Walker, who does not feel the vivid magic of the theatre world, has to train her. How could they work together successfully, when Tilly is just joking about her definitely missing computer-gen and for her the old card system is still perfect enough to manage the inventory? Then her life is near to shattering and she has to grow up, open her eyes to her problems and take things seriously.

Theme and Genre

This romantic Christmas novel is about family, friendship, love and life, and about beautiful London during Christmas time when Covent Garden, smelling of cinnamon and mulled wine, if full of lights and joy. An important theme is working with a leading opera company, opera, ballet, artists and the support team behind any performance on stage.  

Characters

The characters are well described, loveable and understandable, and the development of artistic, sassy, but always caring Tilly makes her even more likeable.

Plot and Writing

Tilly, the first-person narrator, tells the story. It takes place in London in the weeks before Christmas. The beautiful, festive atmosphere with snow slowly covering London, as well as the buzzling flair of theatre performances, are described in such a colorful and lively way that, while reading, the related pictures and feeling spring immediately to mind. The mixture between thoughtful and funny scenes guaranties pleasurable reading.

Conclusion

A funny, interesting and heartwarming Christmas story, the perfect read for a relaxed festive season.

The Christmas Cookie Club – Ann Pearlman

AuthorAnn Pearlman
PublisherSimon & Schuster UK
Date18 March 2010
EditionKindle
Pages292 (print version)
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13B007990B54

“And maybe love is, ultimately, the best we get. It doesn’t solve everything, but in spite of it all, it’s the most significant thing we have.” (Quotation pos. 3554)

Content

Since sixteen years they meet on the first Monday of December, twelve women, close friends, and members of the cookie club. Marnie is the head cookie bitch. Every member brings thirteen batches of homemade cookies, a dozen in every package, one for every member and one for the local hospice. They eat, drink, dance and celebrate together, sharing not only their cookies and recipes, but also their story, something important that had happened during the year and inspired their choice of this year’s prepared cookie.

Theme and Genre

This book is about cookies, different ingredients and lifelong experiences of falling in love, separating, family, children, disappointment, loss, sorrow, but also about new chances and hope. However, most of all it is about female friendship.

Characters

Twelve different, grown-up women and each one is special, believable and far from perfect. They care and support each other.

Plot and Writing

The story takes place for just one evening in Marnie´s house. Marnie is the first-person-narrator and she and the cookie club are like a frame, which includes the twelve chapters, each one for one member, her receipt, her story and information about one special baking ingredient. Therefore, we are reading kind of twelve different short stories, not one continuous storyline, which for me was different from what I expected.

Conclusion

A story including twelve different stories about lifelong female friendship, about personal destinies and this special yearly meeting of the cookie club. A quiet, thoughtful, but not really Christmassy book that could not completely grip and convince me.

The Holiday Swap – Zara Stoneley

AuthorZara Stoneley
PublisherOne More Chapter
Date2 September 2016
EditionKindle
Pages338 (print version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB01DT37Z5W

“She got out of the car, tugged at her suitcase and tried not to grin, because that wouldn’t be fair. She was finally doing it. Finally going.” (Quotation page 52)

Content

Daisy Fischer is happy with her life, her little cottage near Tippermere and her animals. Until her long-term boyfriend Jimmy proposes and she has to admit to herself that she wants more from her life than just stay in the English countryside between house and pub. Florence Cortes, grown up in Tippermere, lives in a comfortable, beautiful apartment in Barcelona, and writes for a magazine, she owns together with her partner Oli, who is also her boyfriend. But one moment changes everything.

Daisy and Florence need a break from their usual life and swap house – for Daisy this means December in sunny, vivid, amazing Barcelona and Florence is looking forward to be back in England, with snow and traditional Christmas preparations. Soon they find out that this Christmas has some surprises waiting for them.

Theme and Genre

This feel good romance is about changes, what-ifs, friendship, Barcelona and rural England, Christmas and love.

Characters

The characters of the story are witty and loveable with their special attitudes.

Plot and Writing

The story develops between England and Barcelona, takes alternating looks how Florence copes with the animals, an enormous dog, horse and hens, the snow, ice and presumptuous Hugo, who used to tease her when they had been children and now is her neighbor. Daisy loves Barcelona, the sunny beach and the vibrant streets from the very first moment. Moreover, there is charming Javier who shows her his Barcelona with breathtaking views and places.

Conclusion

A cozy, funny, heartwarming Christmas read, perfect to relax in a comfortable reading chair and enjoy.

I Will Judge You by Your Bookshelf – Grant Snider

AuthorGrant Snider
PublisherAbrams & Chronicle Books
Date14 April 2020
EditionIllustrated Hardcover
Pages128
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-1419737114

“MY HOLIDAY WISH LIST – The book everyone is reading – the book no one is reading … A place for all my new books.” (Quotation page 36, in part)

Theme and Content

A collection of literary comics by the well-known American cartoonist and writer Grant Snider, about booklovers, book hoarders, booksmell-addicted, but also about literature, writers and writing, including writer’s block.

Implementation

This beautifully crafted book contains 124 comics of one or two pages, grouped into fourteen chapters from “I’m in love with books” to “I write because I must”. There are stories about bookmarks, unpaid library fees, the smell of old books, about classics and about the daily dreams and problems of writers. Not only the cartoons are funny, but also the texts are witty, philosophical, poetical, giving words their true and real meaning, sometimes a different meaning, and always perfectly illustrated. This is a book to lose yourself time and time again, discovering new details, and just thinking: “so true, that’s me!”

Conclusion

A charming book, every bookworm will love from the first page.

Lifesaving for Beginners – Ciara Geraghty

AuthorCiara Geraghty
PublisherHodder & Stoughton
Date27 September 2012
EditionKindle edition
Pages465 (print version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB008HTQ34I

„Four months. That’s all it takes. Four months for everything to fall apart.” (Quotation Pos. 893)

Content

A brief moment of inattention of the truck driver, a deer on the road, two hitten cars, and after this first of June everything has changed. For Kat Kavanagh, the thirty-nine years old famous author, who publishes her crime novels under an alias, who was in one of the two cars, and whose friend Thomas told her that she were lucky. For Milo McIntyre, nine years old, whose Mam was in the other car and had no chance. Faith, Milo’s twenty-four years old sister, who still lives at home, does her best to look after Milo. One day in October, when she is searching for something in the attic, she finds old documents and a hidden family secret that again had changed and will change the life of the persons involved.

Theme and Genre

This novel is about lies, trust, loss and grief, but most of all about family, friendship, love, courage and hope.

Characters

We meet likeable characters, most of all Milo, but also Faith and Kat’s brother Ed, and a main character, I have disliked for the major part of the story: Kat, selfish, egoistic, cold and sunken into self-pity.

Plot and Writing

There are two main stories, alternately told by Kat or Milo, both first-person narrators, interspersed with some flashbacks. The plot is believable and a well-balanced mixture of romance, humor and substance with some interesting twists, until loose ends are tied together.

Conclusion

More than just another chick-lit novel, this is a delightful, cozy story with deepness.

The Lido – Libby Page

AuthorLibby Page
PublisherOrion
Date4 April 2019
EditionPaperback
Pages400
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-1409175223

“We shouldn’t stop fighting, and we shouldn’t stop enjoying it here.” (Quotation pos. 2292)

Content

Kate is twenty-six years old and has recently moved to Brixton. She is a journalist for the Brixton Chronicle, longing for a real good story to advance her career. When she is asked to investigate and write a story about the local lido, open since 1937, and “Paradise Living”, a property company who wants to buy it and turn it into a private members gym area, she sees her chance. But she had no idea, how much meeting eighty-six years old Rosemary Peterson and her friends, and the campaign they would start together to save the lido, would also change her own life.

Theme and Genre

A feel-good novel about friendship, love, community spirit and solidarity, swimming and, of course, the lido, the outdoor swimming pool in Brixton, South London.

Characters

Rosemary has lived all her live in Brixton, it was here where she has met George, her husband and the lido with the happy memories of a lifetime now is all left for her, after George has died. Kate has always felt more comfortable with books than in real life. Apart from her job, she lives a lonely live in London, until she meets Rosemary. The characters we meet in the story are believable, witty and charming.

Plot and Writing

The story starts during springtime and time is short, because the lido is to be closed and turned in a private members property. Reading, we find us in the middle of the community and the campaign, hoping, that somehow there will be a solution to save the lido. We also learn about Rosemary’s youth and a long gone past, her life with George, many years of early morning swims in this lido and walks through the adjacent park. A fox on his way through the streets of Brixton in search for food leftovers shows the other side of the area, the poor and homeless. The story and the characters are fictitious, but Brockwell Lido and its history is real.

Conclusion

An enjoyable, uplifting read about the values of a community, about friendship, family and love. Full of vibrant and colorful descriptions, of charming, loveable characters, this novel is perfect to get lost in the story and summer dreams.

Spectres in the Snow: A Third Collection of Classic Ghost Stories for Christmas

Author21 authors
PublisherBlack Heath Editions
Date9 September 2016
EditionKindle
Pages391 pages (print)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB01LW9TVHI

“Haunted or no, there was something so uncanny in the appearance of the old gables, fast rottering to ruin, that even in the crepuscular light and early evening, persons would hurry by it with a shudder, while later at night, many would go a long way round rather than pass its weather-worn walls.” (Quotation pos. 337 “The Phantom Riders” by Ernest R. Suffling)

Theme and Content

A collection of ghost stories set in the Victorian and Edwardian time. Written by different authors, these twenty-one old gothic tales too are multifaceted, but always gripping and spooky. The reader meets phantom riders, haunted houses and haunted rooms, the dead sexton, Mr. Morgan in Australia who always hurries home before it gets dark, and a friendly ghost who helps his descendants and real true stories about eerie appearances with no logical explanation. Mysterious things happen in these nights around Christmas, where the snow is falling and shadows might be not only shadows but also something else.  

Conclusion

This selection of traditional ghost stories, written in the poetic language of the olden times, is a perfect read for the dark winter nights around Christmas time.

A Child’s Christmas in Wales – Dylan Thomas

AuthorDylan Thomas
IllustratorTrina Schart Hyman
PublisherHoliday House
Date17 October 2017
EditionHardcover
Pages48
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-0823438709

“It was always snowing at Christmas. December, in my memory, is white as Lapland, though there were no reindeers.” (Citation page 8)

Content, Theme and Genre

The well-known Welsh poet Dylan Thomas writes about the traditional Christmas days of his childhood with the family celebrating together and the fun children had.

This is a book about Christmas that makes grown-ups dream and still will be enjoyed by children of any age. The illustrations by Trina Schart Hyman make this book a delightful gem, to be read every year again and again.

Conclusion

A beautifully illustrated story about the joy of traditional Christmas days for readers of every age.

Winter Ghosts: Classic Ghost Stories for Christmas – Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell and others

AuthorCharles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell and others
PublisherBlack Heath Editions
Date18 September 2014
EditionKindle
Pages378 (print version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB00NQA0K1U

“As for me, I know very well that when I read him of a dark night, I am obliged to creep to bed without shutting ny book, and without daring to look behind me.” (Quotation from “The Dead Man’s Story”, pos. 1056)

“We talked on an extraordinary variety of subjects, I distinctly recollect a long argument on mushrooms-mushrooms, murders, racing, cholera; from cholera we came to sudden death, from sudden death to churchyards, and from churchyards, it was naturally but a step to ghosts.” (Quotation from “Number Ninety”, pos. 3878)

Content

The Phantom Coach by Amelia B Edwards

The Ghost of Christmas Eve by J.M. Barrie

The Governess’s Story by Amyas Northcote

The Story of the Goblins Who Stole a Sexton by Charles Dickens

The Dead Man’s Story by James Hain Friswell

Bone to His Bone by E.G. Swain

Jerry Bundler by W.W. Jacobs

The Old Nurse’s Story by Elizabeth Gaskell

Thurlow’s Christmas Story by John Kendrick Bangs

The Story of a Disappearance and an Appearance by M.R. James

The Real and the Counterfeit by Louisa Baldwin

Mustapha by S. Baring-Gould

Wolverden Tower by Grant Allen

Number Ninety by B.M. Croker

The Great Staircase at Landover Hall by Frank Stockton

A Strange Christmas Game by Charlotte Riddell

What Was He? by Theo Gift

The Brazen Cross by H.B. Marriott Watson

The Beeston Ghost by John Swaffield Orton

Theme and Genre

A collection of classic Victorian and Edwardian ghost stories about inexplicable, supernatural, spooky experiences, written by different authors.

Conclusion

A perfect collection for dark winter evenings, giving you spine-tingling feelings. Very different stories and different writing styles make this book a thrilling, enjoyable reading.

Book Love – Debbie Tung

AuthorDebbie Tung
PublisherAndrews McMeel Publishing
Date1 January 2019
EditionHardcover
Pages144
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-1449494285

“How to spot a Bookworm – Saying they’ll just have a quick browse but come our looking like they bought a whole shelf.” (Quotation page 106, 107)

Genre, Theme and Content

Illustrations and relating texts for every minute, day and situation in the life of a book addict. Humorous, funny comics to make a bookworm laugh aloud with pleasure, smiling and nodding in agreement. Debbie Tung perfectly understands the everyday problems of bibliophiles and how it feels to be one.

Conclusion

A perfect gift for booklovers, for bibliophiles knowing the meaning of “SUB” and owning some of it. A book to flip through, read and enjoy time and again.

Fireside Gothic – Andrew Taylor

AuthorAndrew Taylor
PublisherHarperCollins
Date3 November 2016
EditionKindle
Pages257 (print-version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB01D4WO1VE

A collection of three gothic stories

Content

BROKEN VOICES

“The emptiness of the place enfolded us like a shroud. The air was cold and smelled faintly of earth, incense and candles.” (Quotation page 44)

The narrator remembers one special Christmas, more than forty years ago. He is fifteen years old and has to stay in school over the holidays, together with a boy named Faraday, who is two years younger. Mr. Ratcliffe, an old, long retired teacher, takes care of them and during the evenings, he entertains them with ghost stories about the nearby Cathedral. Some of the stories have real backgrounds, such as the fate of Mr. Goldsworthy, two hundred years ago, and the beautiful anthem he wrote, since lost. Therefore, the boys plan to climb the tower of the Cathedral and search for the lost sheet of notes.

THE LEPER HOUSE

“There’s always a next time.” (Quotation page 159)

After the funeral of his sister, the narrator is on his way to visit a client in Ipswich and afterwards he would drive home to London, where he lives. But there are roadworks, the day changes into a dark, rainy, stormy evening when the traffic stops again. Therefore, he follows some local drivers, taking a narrow road, when one of the tires of his car is punctured. He leaves the car, starts to walk and suddenly he sees a light and arrives at an old cottage by the sea.

THE SCRATCH

“Two things happened that afternoon which were both important, though I didn’t realize their significance until later.” (Quotation page 176)

Clare and Gerald live in a rural area, near the Forest of Dean. Jack, Gerald`s young nephew, just back from the army in Afghanistan, is going to stay with them for some time. He dislikes their cat Cannop, because he generally does not like cats. He is sure that there must be wild cats in the Forest, because sometimes he notices a big, dark shadow on his daily walk through the forest. One day Clare sees a big scratch on his arm.

Conclusion

Three stories, modern versions of the well-known traditional Gothic novels, a perfect read for rainy, dark afternoons and evenings. The gripping, suspenseful plot starts from normal daily situations, which makes everything that happens plausible. There are always more solutions and explanations, left open for us readers to think about and find our own ideas. Just relax, light some candles and enjoy the high literary quality of stories and the eerie fascination.  

Your Soul is a River – Nikita Gill

AuthorNikita Gill
PublisherThought Catalog Books
Date12 June 2016
EditionKindle
Pages160 (Print edition)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB01H0RMWTC

“I hope you find someone who knows how to love you when you are sad.” (Original quotation, page 132, A Midnight Thought)

Content

A selection of powerful poems, each of it telling a story. They are divided into chapters with the following titles: The Cosmos. Fire. The Storm. Ache. The Sea, the River, the Ocean. Wild. The Earth. Heal.

Themes and Language

Nikita Gill is one of the modern poets who share their impressive thoughts also via Instagram. She writes about love that hurts, ends and still hurts. These are powerful poems about darkness, the unbroken forces of nature, about growing strong again, hope and the journey of our souls to heal the inner child. Her language reveals deep feelings and she knows how to paint pictures in our minds and souls.

Conclusion

In these modern poems lyricism flows with richness of pictures painted by poetic words and feelings, rhythms like a stormy sea, darkness and sadness, and the hope of being strong and whole again.

What She Knew – Gilly Macmillan

AuthorGilly Macmillan
PublisherPiatkus
Date18 August 2016
FormatKindle
Pages565 (print)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB01K1IZNIE

“If there’s so much potential for others to judge us wrongly, then how can we be sure that our assessment of them in any way resembles the real person that lies underneath?” (citation pos. 152)

Content

Rachel Jenner, recently divorced, photographer, loves to go for a walk with her son Ben, eight years old, and their dog Skittle. When he wants to run ahead to go on the rope swing, Skittle on his side, she tries not to listen to her maternal voice and allows it, because it is not far and he knows the way. After a short phone call with her sister, Rachel arrives at the rope – and Ben is not here. He is missing, without any traces. Every day that passes makes the search and the questions more desperate.

Theme and Genre

This thriller is about the impact of a case of a missing child on the family, friends and the investigating police. An important topic is the psychological point of view, the feelings of the persons involved. The story also shows the pressure of the public opinion, of journalists, of strangers gathering and sharing their opinions via social media, hate postings and bullying.

Characters

Rachel sometimes still struggles to get over her divorce. She feels guilty for letting Ben run ahead in the wood and with the public opinion calling her a bad mother almost breaks her down, as well as having to wait for results of the investigation. But she never gives up.

DI James Clemo leads the investigation team, knowing that time is important and if the want to find Ben, they first have to find out who took him.

Plot and Writing

Rachel and Jim, beginning with a prolog one year after Ben’s disappearance, tell the captivating story. Each day is a chapter and begins with notes from an OJJDP law report about Missing and Abducted Children, Rachel’s description of the events and Jim who tells his part to the story to his therapist. Together with extracts from the blog, it is this special and brilliant plotting, that makes the story so breathtaking, deeply impressing and thrilling.

Conclusion

A gripping, unputdownable story and definitely not a book that is closed with the last page, shelved and soon forgotten. An amazing read that remains in the readers thoughts.

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