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Year End 2024 – AnnaBookBel

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Just some ramblings about what I’ve watched lately on the small screen…

Christmas Viewing & New Year viewing:

Apart from (still, after all these years) loving Eastenders and the year-end drama it always provides, the Christmas Day highlight had to be Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl. Such attention to detail, and the chase sequence being in narrowboats restricted to 4mph was inspired! What I’m now going to say will be heresy in some quarters – but Gavin & Stacey just doesn’t do it for me – never has. I wish I’d watched the Roger Moore programme on BBC2 instead (which was fab when I caught up with it). BBC2 has also offered quiz nights every night on BBC2 which has been great for filling in gaps with Richard Osman’s House of Games, Celebrity Mastermind, Only Connect Christmas specials and Christmas University Challenge (the latter always a joy as the questions are slightly easier and they still get them wrong!)

Around my streaming subs:

In recent weeks, streaming platforms have offered some great viewing: Apple TV+ has had Bad Sisters, season 2 – not quite as good as the first, but still brilliant, and Silo continues – again not as good as the first series, but is building to something. Netflix had the second season of The Diplomat – which carries on from the moment the first ended – and has Allison Janney at the end! I still find Keri Russell’s tousled US Ambassador to the Court of St James unlikely – but it’s so watchable. Also I discovered Temple with Mark Strong as a doctor who runs an ‘underground’ hospital whilst illegally researching a cure for his comatose wife. Amazon Prime hasn’t really offered anything I want to watch series-wise, although I did rent The Critic (Strong again, with Ian McKellen) which was promising at the start but less so by the end.

I’m liking the matching colours above! However, the best new thing I’ve seen is also on Netflix.

A Man on the Inside stars Ted Danson, as a widowed professor who, persuaded by his daughter that he needs to get out and start doing things rather than send her newspaper clippings answers an advert and finds himself working for a detective agency, going undercover in a care home to discover who stole a valuable necklace from one of the residents. It’s an hilarious but gentle comedy, that never takes the mickey out of what it is to grow old and need care. Danson as Charles is superb, super-keen, a little pompous, witty, and a huge hit with the ladies in the home. But having lost his own wife to dementia, there is one touching episode in which he is trying to rule out Gladys as the thief, only to discover she is on that pathway.

Meanwhile, back on the BBC – it’s The Traitors! It is so interesting to see how the show is evolving now it’s in a third series. Just love Claudia. I do hope that they’ll bring back the three who took one for the teams who didn’t even get as far as the castle, especially the gardener chap – he looked fun. Such a shame they got rid of Yin and Keith so early though – both true characters, and hearing Yin talk on Traitors: Uncloaked (follows on on BBC2) was fascinating.

What have you been watching lately? Any good new series to share…

#OneLevelDown by @marygthompson

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Ella is the oldest five-year-old in the universe. For fifty-eight years, the founder of a simulated colony-planet has forced her to pretend to be his daughter. Her “Daddy” has absolute power over all elements of reality, which keeps the colonists in line even when their needs are not met. But his failing experiments and despotic need for absolute control are increasingly dangerous.

Ella’s very life depends on her performance as a child. She has watched Daddy delete her stepmother and the loved ones of anyone who helps her.

But every sixty years, a Technician comes from the world above. Ella has been watching and working and biding her time. Because if she cannot make the technician help her, the only solution is a desperate measure that could lead to consequences for the entire universe.

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One Level Down – Tachyon Publications

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Our teacher, Camilla Wolkowitz, has driven us in the truck to the edge of the forest. (1)

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(@TachyonPub, 11 March 2025, 196 pages, ARC from the publisher via @NetGalley_UK)

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This is my first time reading the author. I really enjoyed One Level Down. I pretty much knew I’d enjoy it when I read the blurb and wasn’t disappointed. I really enjoyed the premise of this novella and how the author executed it. This is a well-written, engaging read. I’d like to read more of the author’s work. I’d recommend this.

4/5

Come meet me on my puzzle book tour!

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The Most Unladylike Puzzle Book is publishing on the 26th of September, and to celebrate I’m going out on tour! Here’s where I’ll be …

BATH Festival, 28th September, 2pm. This is a talk with a signing afterwards.

CHELTENHAM Festival, 12th October, 2pm. This is a talk with a signing afterwards.

KILKENNY Bookville Festival, 14th October, 11am. This is an online event for schools – but other people can sign up too!

YORK Waterstones, 19th October, 1pm. This is a signing event.

LIVERPOOL Waterstones, 26th October, 12pm. This is a signing event.

NOTTINGHAM Waterstones, 27th October, 12pm. This is a talk with a signing afterwards.

DUBLIN Festival, 10th November, 10:00am. This is a talk with a signing afterwards.

LONDON Muswell Hill, Children’s Bookshop, 17th November, 12pm. This is a signing event.

If you already have copies of my books, you can absolutely bring them along to the signing – I’m always happy to sign books old and new.

If you have access requirements, especially around queuing, please speak to the stores/festivals directly. There are always things we can do to make the experience easier for you!

If a town or city in your region is not here, don’t worry! I try to visit different places each tour – I’ll be back out on the road next year. But it may be that you will need to travel a little to see me – I just can’t get to every town in the UK and Ireland, although I wish I could!

I’m very excited about the tour – it’s always so wonderful to be able to meet you and talk to you about my books! See you soon …

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Six Degrees of Separation: Orbital – AnnaBookBel

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First Saturday of the month and time for the super monthly tag Six Degrees of Separation, which is hosted by Kate at Booksaremyfavouriteandbest, Six Degrees of Separation #6degrees picks a starting book for participants to go wherever it takes them in six more steps. Links to my reviews are in the titles of the books chosen. The starter book this month is:

Orbital by Samantha Harvey

This love letter to the Earth set on board the International Space Station takes place over one day of multiple orbits. It was my Book of the Year – nuff said.

A book which is in effect a love letter to the pioneer days of the space race, that isn’t The Right Stuff, is:

The Last Pilot by Benjamin Johncock

Beyond the technological marvels, the successes – and the failures of the space race in the 1960s, are human stories rfet. The pioneering heroes had wives and families, friends and colleagues, who are left behind every flight, every launch, wondering if their man will come home. The Last Pilot is a novel about one such human story, a fictional family set amongst the real life test pilots and astronauts and their story blends seamlessly into that of history.

Another novel titled ‘The Last …’ is:

The Last Children of Tokyo by Yoko Tawada

Yoshiro is a centenarian, one of Japan’s ‘old-elderly’. He lives on in Tokyo looking after his great-grandson Mumei. Japan has been devastated by an environmental disaster – we never discover exactly what happened – and it has resulted in the old living on and remaining relatively spritely with age, but the young die young, the poisons in the air, the earth, the food, waste them away. Mumei will be in the last generation of children and Yoshiro takes infinite care with his young charge. It is a very subtle dystopia and while being a mere 138 pages long, it is an intense read indeed. 

Another Yoko is:

Hotel Iris by Yoko Ogawa

Seventeen-year-old Mari is a dutiful daughter, manning the desk at her family hotel, the Hotel Iris, situated in a Japanese seaside town. The book opens with a guest and the prostitute he’d brought back to the hotel causing a kerfuffle and being ejected. Mari is fascinated by the man’s voice. Later she sees him again and follows him. After a few days of stalking they strike up a conversation. He is a translator, and lives an ascetic life on the island off the coast. The first shock is to find that he is a widower in his sixties, but that doesn’t seem to matter to Mari, she’s ready to fall in love. The second is when she goes with him to the island, and the third is when he ties her up and subjects her to degrading acts which she submits to with increasing pleasure – but always managing to catch the ferry home before her mother wonders where she is. Unsettling indeed!

Another hotel is:

The Glass Hotel by Emily St John Mandel

This novel has three main protagonists: Vincent, the beautiful bartender; Jonathan Alkaitis, a financier who owns the hotel where she works; and Leon Prevant, a shipping executive. All three meet in the Hotel Caiette, an exclusive hotel only reachable by ferry from Vancouver Island – the kind of place you retreat to – for whatever reason. When her boss’s scheme goes wrong, Vincent has to escape and make herself scarce. So she goes to work as a chef on a cargo ship…

Another novel in which someone lies low working on a ship is…

Miss Smilla’s Feeling for Snow by Peter Høeg

When the six-year-old son of Smilla Jaspersen’s neighbour falls to his death from their apartment block roof, Smilla knows it wasn’t an accident, he fell getting away from someone. The police will close the case but she saw the footsteps in the snowy roof and how he ran on it. So Smilla investigates, and on finding that the boy’s father died in an ‘accident’ in Greenland, is drawn into something much larger, more insidious, greedy and violent. It will draw her back to her homeland, on a voyage in a specially equipped icebreaker up to the Arctic and will put her in terrible danger, but if anyone can survive there, it’s Smilla who has that feeling for snow, and they’ll discover something up there that should have stayed buried.

Which is also the case in

Phase Six by Jim Shepard

There is a real concern that underneath the ice are a host of pathogens biding their time, waiting for the opportunity provided by climate change to emerge. In Phase Six, one such bug is uncovered in the thawing permafrost in a small Greenland settlement which two boys unwittingly pick up and transmit to their community. Had no-one had to leave the village, its onward transmission might have stopped, but the mine-workers transported out taking it with them. Too late! Here, Shepard changes point of view, and we join Jeannine and Danice who work for the US Center for Disease Control (CDC) on a team going up to Greenland to investigate the outbreak… This novel remains probably the best description of an outbreak of a deadly virus I’ve read.

I’ve gone from space to the US desert over to Japan, back across the Pacific to Canada ending up in Greenland with some strong themes of being on the edge. Where will your six degrees take you?

The Secret Christmas Bookshop by Cressida McLaughlin

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In a village by the sea, where wintry skies bring a dusting of sparkling snow, somebody is opening an unexpected gift…

When Sophie receives a surprise package, she’s intrigued to find a beautifully bound book inside.

Sophie is desperate to discover the mystery sender, and her hunt draws her to the enigmatic Harry. The subject of much gossip since his return from London, Harry keeps to himself in his crumbling manor house.

But they are both about to learn that the best stories can take on a life of their own.

If you are looking to start your festive reads now in October and not sure where to start then The Secret Christmas Bookshop by Cressida McLaughlin is a great place to start in my opinion because it is a cosy winter romance without being to heavy on the festivity.

This is a new standalone from Cressida and introduces us to a whole host of new characters who are big on community spirit and traditions. Our main character Sophie has never had a place to call home that is permanent which offers solid foundations, stability and love. Having always been ready to up and run as soon as she starts to set down roots anywhere and start again in a way of protecting herself from making strong bonds and face getting hurt, her first instinct is to run and start again. 

I adored not only this storyline but also Sophie as a character, she has a dream job making notebooks which really intrigued me being such a big stationery addict myself but I also really warmed to her character. She was such a loveable woman who I was hoping I would see let her barriers down and let those around her who love her to help her feel safe and secure to be able to actually start living her life rather than always being on the run.

There was a lovely romance blossoming and yes you could see this romance happening a mile off but that’s fine with me as I was still so preoccupied trying to get to the bottom of the mystery of who was behind the secret book shop book gifts which I still hold my hands up and say I didn’t solve until the point before they were discovered.

I will say at times I was so frustrated with Sophie and wanted to give her a good shake and a hard wakeup call but luckily our characters felt the same as me and gave her some tough love for me!

This was a heart-warming romance that was full of community spirit and learning to trust again to be able to truly start living. 

Available to purchase here

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