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yeezy slides Resin kids uk 13

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yeezy slides Resin kids uk 13

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Multivitamin & Minerals 100% RDA 400 Vegan Tablets A-Z for Men & Women UK Made

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Multivitamin & Minerals 100% RDA 400 Vegan Tablets A-Z for Men & Women UK Made

Price : 18.99

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2024 Book Advent – Day Twenty-One! – Bookshine And Readbows

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Day 21 of my 2024 bookish advent calendar is…

The Butterfly Summer by Harriet Evans!

I’ve already read a few books by this author, so I know she does a good line in ominous childhood secrets, exploring girlhood and womanhood, and the trauma of dysfunctional family dynamics, so I suspect that light summery cover is hiding something darker!

Here’s more about the book:

Blurb: It begins and ends with Keepsake, the house that holds its shadows too tightly. 

Nina Parr’s mother has lied to her for most of her life. But when Nina inherits Keepsake, a long-forgotten house in Cornwall, she pieces together a sad truth that reaches back to the outbreak of war in the 1930s. A must-read for fans of Kate Morton and Santa Montefiore.

What magic is this?

You follow the hidden creek towards a long-forgotten house.

They call it Keepsake, a place full of wonder . . . and danger. Locked inside the crumbling elegance of its walls lies the story of the Butterfly Summer, a story you’ve been waiting all your life to hear.

This house is Nina Parr’s birthright. It holds the truth about her family – and a chance to put everything right at last.

Two things happen when you are a Parr girl: when you are ten, you are told about your future role.

The second thing that a Parr girl at some point must learn is harder to tell of.

It is a dark work indeed, the business of this house, hidden from the world.

Pick up your own copy HERE and come back tomorrow to find out what’s under the covers of Day 22!

Review: Young Queens, Leah Redmond Chang

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Review: Young Queens, Leah Redmond Chang – Girl with her Head in a Book























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6-24 Mens Grids Faux Leather Watch Display Case Collection Storage Holder Box UK

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6-24 Mens Grids Faux Leather Watch Display Case Collection Storage Holder Box UK

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CBY Book Club: Cover Reveal

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Exciting News!

I’m thrilled to unveil the cover of Snow Blind, the upcoming novella in the Talisman Series by the talented Brett Salter! This YA Fantasy/Adventure promises to take readers on a thrilling journey filled with magic, mystery and mythical creatures.

And now, without further ado, here is the stunning cover for Snow Blind:

Series: A Talisman Series Novella 2.5

Author: Brett Salter
Publication Date: 1 December 2024
Genre: YA Fantasy / Adventure

Book Description:

Mr. Jones is a brilliant wizard who can magically teleport people, cripple a Nocturn with his knowledge alone, and provide some of the best mythological creature-based outbursts you’ll ever hear, but what he can’t do is master modern technology.  So, when he receives a cryptic email responding to his old, online post about finding a willing dragon to perform The Great Synergy, he’s rightfully cautious to follow up.  With Rome and Julian studying abroad in England, Mr. Jones is on his own to figure this puzzle out.  The mysterious respondent, IceEyes27, has sent him meeting coordinates that place him directly in the middle of frigid nowhere, Antarctica.  It could be a trap.  Or it could be a joke.  But whatever it is, Mr. Jones better pack his long underwear and settle in for white-knuckle plane rides, encounters with dragon hunters, and potential visits to a dragon den lost to legend.  Surrounded by empty miles of unyielding desolation, will our intrepid librarian save himself and open his eyes to the reality of his world?  Or will he remain, like so many others, blinded by the snow?

Connect with Brett Salter

What Do You Think?

I’d love to hear your thoughts on the cover! Are you as excited as I am for Mr. Jones’s icy adventure? Let me know in the comments below!



Hamilton Khaki Aviation Men’s Black Watch with Silver Stainless Steel Band

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Hamilton Khaki Aviation Men’s Black Watch with Silver Stainless Steel Band

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Nike Air Tracksuit – Grey, Comfortable Hoodie and Jogger Set

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Nike Air Tracksuit – Grey, Comfortable Hoodie and Jogger Set

Price : 60.00

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Books to Look Out For in January 2025: Part Two

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I’ve read just one from the second part of January’s preview but I’m kicking off with another I’m eagerly anticipating. You might think I’d had enough of Cover image for How to Sleep at Night by Elizabeth HarrisAmerican politics but it’s the political thread that attracts me to Elizabeth Harris’s How to Sleep at Night. Ethan and Gabe are happily raising their daughter together despite drifting to very different ends of the political spectrum. When Ethan announces he plans to run for Congress as a Republican, it’s not only Gabe’s world that’s upended. Ethan’s sister is a jaded political reporter for a national newspaper dallying with an affair with her ex when Ethan’s decision threatens to derail her career. ‘A sharply observed comedy of manners about public image versus private life, How to Sleep at Night is a witty and whip-smart novel that dissects family ties stretched thin by politics’ says the blurb. Very much like the sound of that.Cover image for Lazarus Man by Richard Price

Richard Price’s Lazarus Man is a bit outside my usual neck of the literary woods but Price was one of the writers on The Wire, still one of the best things I’ve seen on TV. His novel is set in east Harlem in 2008 when a five-storey apartment block collapses killing six tenants. By the end of the day many others are missing. Price follows several characters whose lives are irreversibly changed by the tragedy, from the young photographer who records the ensuing chaos to a survivor who was buried for days. ‘Rich with indelible characters and high drama, Lazarus Man is a riveting work of suspense and social vision by one of our major writers’ says the blurb.

Cover image for Another Man in the Street by Caryl PhillipsCover image for Another Man in the Street by Caryl PhillipsIt’s some time since I read anything by Caryl Phillips and I’ve a feeling I didn’t take to his writing style very well but the premise of Another Man in the Street is a very attractive one. Victor ‘Lucky’ Johnson arrives in London from St Kitts in the early ‘60s, hoping for a career in journalism but eventually becoming a rent collector for a slum landlord. Phillips’s novel explores the experience of the Windrush generation through Victor’s story, following him from his arrival to the present day. ‘Another Man in the Street is an unforgettable story of loss, displacement, belonging, and the triumph of Black resilience – epic in scope and yet profoundly intimate, and a radical and timely portrait of immigrant London’ says the blurb making me keen to read it.Cover image for The Edges by Angelo TijssensCover image for The Edges by Angelo Tijssens

Published by Daunt Originals who seem to have a sharp editorial eye, Angelo Tijssens’ debut novel, The Edges, sees a man returning to his hometown after the death of his mother, unable to resist visiting his former lover. ‘As we are drawn into the narrator’s past, we see how a childhood marked by abuse and a life lived on the edges can shape someone – and what respite and beauty can be found in love and trust’ says the blurb suggesting a hopeful resolution.

Cover image for The Gorgeous Inertia of Earth by Adrain DuncanCover image for The Gorgeous Inertia of Earth by Adrain DuncanI was a big fan of Adrian Duncan’s Love Notes from a German Building Site, The Geometer Lobachevsky not so much but I’m keen to read his new one, The Gorgeous Inertia of the Earth. An Irish restorative painter falls in love with an Italian sociologist, reawakening memories of an incident that has overshadowed his life. Years later, he’s asked to pray for a dying friend and spends a day roaming the streets of Bologna, contemplating his own life, past and present, and its foundations. ‘A delicately crafted novel of two halves, a decade apart, The Gorgeous Inertia of the Earth is a masterful excavation of human desires, inhibitions, and the patterns of habit to which we unwittingly fall prey’ says the blurb promisinglyCover image for The Artist by Lucy SteedsCover image for The Artist by Lucy Steeds

Lucy Steeds’s The Artist begins in 1957 with a woman gazing at a painting she knows intimately in London’s National Gallery before winding back to the summer of 1920 when a young art journalist travels to Provence, hoping to interview the renowned and notoriously reclusive Edouard Tartuffe who agrees only on the basis that Joseph will model for him. Tata’s every need is attended to by Ettie who has hardly left the remote farmhouse where she and her uncle live. As the summer wears on, Joseph unravels a perplexing mystery, and Ettie sees a way for her own artistic talent to be recognised. Steeds’s debut is gorgeously immersive, the summer Provencal landscape vividly evoked and her descriptions of art arresting.  Highly recommend this one. Review shortly…

That’s it for January’s new fiction. As ever, a click on a title will take you to a more detailed synopsis should you want to know more, and if you’d like to catch up with part one it’s here. Paperbacks soon…

Metal Professional YoYo Kids Toy Boys Pro Stunt Trick Yo-Yo Bearing Ball Gift UK

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Metal Professional YoYo Kids Toy Boys Pro Stunt Trick Yo-Yo Bearing Ball Gift UK

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