Take Me Home

By

Karly Lane

When life decides to hand out unlooked for change, it often comes with hidden benefits which at the time are very hard to discover. It is this theme, along with...
The French Gift

By

Kirsty Manning

Kirsty Manning states,” It has long been my quest in Historical Fiction to draw attention to forgotten pockets of history.” something she has done an extraordinarily fine way. Her book...
Hope is a Verb

By

Emily Ehlers

Six steps to radical optimism when the world seems broken Hope. What is it in real term? Is it an emotion that is fleeting, something to be sought, or is...
Black Widows

By

Cate Quinn

One man with three wives and a life living on a hidden stretch of land in Utah, made perfect sense to Blake Nelson; his wives were very different, each adding...
Night Blue

By

Angela O’Keeffe

Every once in a while, you come across a book that is so remarkable it challenges all your previous concepts. Night Blue is such a book and so wonderfully written...
The Nothing Man

By

Catherine Ryan Howard

A serial rapist and murder is called The Nothing Man not only because he leaves no physical evidence behind but also because nothing distinguishes him or his life; he is...
The Last Reunion

By

Kayte Nunn

Kayte Nunn has written an excellent story in The Last Reunion to bring to light an almost unknown group of women. Australian, English, and Indian women served in the Burma...
The Long, Long Afternoon

By

Inga Vesper

Set in an affluent white neighbourhood of the post war America 1950’s during the endless days of a hot California summer, housewife Joyce Haney vanishes. The children are found in...
Something to Hide

By

Fleur McDonald

Following on from Red Dirt Country, Something to Hide finds Dave Burrows at a crisis point in his life, or should one say another crisis point, this time one that...
A Week to Remember

By

Esther Campion

A Week to Remember  from Esther Campion is certainly reminiscent of Maeve Binchy’s style of writing. The story is set in Ireland and the landscape, the language and the customs...