Here are my favourite audio books of the year Part Four. There’s always a Gothic mystery in there. Plus Chris Whitaker makes a second appearance of the year.
The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton
I signed up for this as an audio book on Borrowbox. It’s 20 hours long – which is huge – I can see it’s six hours and 48 mins as a physical book. I had to renew it after 15 days, but then when I tried to renew it a second time, I saw I couldn’t and only had three days to go before it expired and five hours left to read.
I’m a fast reader so it was a bit frustrating. It’s a wonderful book though and is really three separate stories which come together throughout the book.
For my full review click here
The House of Fever by Polly Crosby
The Unravelling (the author’s second novel) is probably one of my favourite books of all time, certainly of the decade. Therefore once again I had high expectations for The House of Fever and I was not disappointed.
Following the death of Agnes Templeton’s father from tuberculosis, Agnes and her mother have fallen on hard times. But while in France, Agnes meets the enigmatic Dr Christian Fairhaven and after a whirlwind romance, they marry. Christian is the owner of Hedoné, an exclusive sanatorium for TB patients who are either every rich like Juno Harrington, or very talented like Sippie and Georgie.
For my full review click here
All The Colours Of The Dark by Chris Whitaker
I can’t pretend I initially enjoyed it quite as much as We Begin At The End, because no-one can take the place of thirteen-year-old Duchess Day Radley, self-proclaimed outlaw.
But thirteen-year-old Joseph ‘Patch’ Macauley is a self-proclaimed pirate, which is almost as good. He was born with one eye, so it goes without saying that he would wear a patch over the other. I loved him and his best friend Saint Brown. I even loved Misty Meyer, who really comes into her own throughout the book.
For my full review click here
Things in Jars by Jess Kidd
I loved this book. I listened to it on Audible and really enjoyed the narrator’s soft Irish accent. Bridie Devine is a fantastic character, a female detective in the late 1800s, who is never phased by what she sees, which includes the dead bodies of murder victims.
There are so many other brilliant characters in this richly woven tale of murder, kidnapping, circus curiosities, and incompetent police. My favourites include dead boxer Ruby Doyle, who only Bridie can see (apart from the lions and snakes that is), seven-foot-tall housemaid Cora, and Eurilie (no idea how to spell it as I was listening to the audio book), the Queen of Snakes.
For my full review click here