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A little about me I love to read I was taught by my mum at a very young age starting with the famous Peter and Jane books! I moved on to read Enid Blyton books all of them loved the Famous 5, I then progressed to Agatha Christie as well as some of the classics such as Charles Dickens, Jane Austen. My favourite book to this day I think is still Daphne Du Mauriers Rebecca I have read and. re read it so many times and I remember watching the old black and white film and Mrs Danvers scared me to death especially at the end when she burns to death. Books are a way of losing yourself they can take you away from what is going on in your life at the time and draw you in to the story. I always think a good author can make you believe anything, you can feel like the character in the book, or you can be scared of the character in the book. Just lose yourself, let yourself be drawn in to a good story.

Saturday, 5 October 2019

SEVEN DAYS By Alex Lake

SEVEN DAYS By Alex Lake
This is one of those books that when you pick it up you just don’t want to put it down. Alex Lake has created a brilliant, well plotted story. With believable characters that you can really relate to, and if you are a parent, you will feel empathy for the mother, father, brother and of course the girl gone missing herself.

On the 7th July 2006 Maggie left her home, she was only going a short distance to see her cousin, but as she crossed the park she was grabbed. When she woke up she was in a room with no windows, a room with not much in it, no bath, no toilet, there was a bucket type thing with a toilet lid on it, and a separate bucket with water to drink and to be used for washing.

The Coopers are an average normal family, Martin, the father, Sandra, the mother, Maggie the fifteen year old daughter, and James the fourteen year old son. The night that Maggie disappeared changed all of their lives, their hopes and dreams for the future. Nothing was the same.

Maggie has been held captive for 12 years in one room, she has seven days to save her son Max who will be 3 in seven days time, Maggie knows the man will come and take Max on his third birthday, she knows this because he has taken two other sons Seb and Leo from her on their third birthdays, she doesn’t know where they are, where did he take them?  Maggie knows that she couldn’t handle Max being taken. She is marking off the days on the calendar, she has written to keep track of the days and years.

The story is told through the points of view of  Martin, Sandra, James and Maggie, also the occasional chapter is D.I. Jane Wynne. Who originally took on the case and it’s haunted her over the twelve years. We go back and forth from the present which is July 2018 back to July 2006, there are sections at different times in between this for instance four years earlier, then the story goes to Maggie, or one of the other family members some of the time it is a chapter about each one of them, to show what is happening in their lives, how the loss of Maggie has affected or changed them. Like a domino effect that one action, has caused all the dominoes to fall one by one, changing all their lives forever.

Despite the timeline being written like this you never lose track of who it is, when it is, or what’s happening, which can sometimes be the case when stories are told from different points of view, with this book it works really well. We see how devastated the parents and James are when Maggie initially goes missing, we are also told of Maggie’s thoughts, she wonders how her parents are doing, are they still together, are they still alive, does James have a girlfriend, or is he married. Then we are back in the present and Maggie is crossing off another day as it gets closer to Max’s birthday.

I really enjoyed reading this, I love the family, I was rooting for them, for everything they go through. The effect this one thing had on them all as individuals. We know who has taken Maggie, so it’s not one of those books that there is the big reveal at the end. Which is surprising in some ways as that would have added more tension to the story. But I think the author did it this way to show that you don’t know what is going on behind a closed door, whether it’s your next door neighbour or someone you know from the past, or someone local. People are so wrapped up in their own lives now that we don’t have time to speak to neighbours, or notice anything different, or suspicious happening nearby. Although I think this person had worked it all out anyway, and was determined not to be caught, and enjoyed taunting DI Wynne, almost every year. I was in tears at the end and for the last few chapters my heart was pounding. I was so engrossed in the story.

We know these things can happen in real life, the documentaries are out there, where girls have been held for 10, 11 12 years and the parents have thought their child to be dead, but they have been held in captivity, or been trafficked,

As I was reading it I was thinking of how I would have coped if anything like this had ever happened to my daughter, and I don’t think I could have handled it, it’s one of those things that you hope will never happen to you.

A fantastic very well written book I certainly give this ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Out of ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️. I also look forward to the next book from this author. I highly recommend you give this book a read.

I would like to thank netgalley and Harper Collins publishers for letting me have an ecopy of this book in exchange for an honest, fair and unbiased review.

Tuesday, 1 October 2019

BOOKS I WILL BE READING AND REVIEWING FOR OCTOBER

THESE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE BOOKS I HAVE DUE OUT IN OCTOBER THAT I WILL BE READING AND REVIEWING.

I am currently reading I Will Make You Pay by Teresa Driscoll
A Psychological thriller, started out pretty good so far, I will be following this by:
These nine books all look great and I am really looking forward to them all, The Boy in The Headlights by Samuel Bjork it is the third book in the Munch and Kruger series I have already read the first two so I am looking forward to seeing how book three goes, Last Request by Liz Mistry, The Noble Path by Peter May, The Six by Luca Veste, I’m not sure yet whether I will read this this month as I think publication is now not until December, so I will see how the other books go, although it is one I am really itching to read so I may fit it in, Traces of her by Amanda Brittany, Her Mother’s Lies by Rona Halsall, His Pretty Girls by Charlie Cox, Seven Days by Alex Lake and See them Run by Marion Todd. I am so looking forward to all of these books.

I am also hoping to slip in a couple of books that I have purchased recently that I really want to get reading as my TBR pile is really stacking up now.

I am also reading a book with Pigeonhole starting today the 1st October so stave 1 is waiting for me to read now and that book is called To Keep You Safe by Kate Bradley so will be reviewing that when it’s finished in 9 days time.

I am also signed to do book blog tours this month these will be my first which I find exciting but a little scary as well as I just want to make sure I write everything down correctly the first one I have finished the book and despite it being a genre I don’t normally read which is Fantasy I absolutely loved it, so that one is on the 8th October and the second is at the end of the month and I think it’s an anthology of short stories I have started reading those and started preparing my blog to type it up.

I hope everyone has a very Happy October and Halloween if you celebrate and I am due my third grandchild at the end of the month I already have two grandsons and my son and his wife thinks this may be another boy, which I think is what they are hoping for, as he doesn’t live local I don’t get to see a great deal of the grandson there now, luckily my daughter lives close by with my other grandson who is a little charmer at 18 months old always smiling. 

SEPTEMBERS ROUND UP

SEPTEMBERS ROUND UP

When I first started reviewing books back in June I think or may have been July I got completely carried away on netgalley, I was like the proverbial child in a sweet shop, all these books and not expecting to get any I went for as many as I thought I would 😊. To my astonishment I was given quite a lot of books to read. I had seventeen for August, 16 for September, but also felt I should get on top of some of October’s as there was another 21, of those I have cleared 10, as well as joining pigeonhole which was another great idea I thought when I found it, reading along with other people a bit at a time, great fun except I picked three books running at the same time in September as well as all the other books, then I saw another site mentioned Edelweiss+ and saw a few books in there, although I didn’t go mad, but did manage to get the final part of a Christina Dodd trilogy I already had the first two books of, so of course I has to read the two I had before going for the final one. So I can honestly say I have had a very busy couple of months of reading and reviewing. I have most of my reviews on my wordpress site which is Jackiesreading4leisure.home.com/Jackie’s reading corner, my daughter helped me set that up, but i’m still now 100% happy with it I need to tweak it a bit I think, but it’s learning how to do that without wiping the whole thing off, now that makes me nervous. I am gradually making more friends on Twitter seems there are some great people both writers and bloggers. I never considered before that reviewing a book can help it sell, or put a book out there a bit more. I just always knew what I liked to read, now i’m finding new authors whose books I enjoy reading, and look forward to finding more in the future.

My top reads for September were:
This was an absolutely unputdownable book, I was hooked from page one, it is eloquently written, with sensitivity to the subject matter covered. You literally feel like you are part of the book. I love the characters and complexities involved in the story.
Maria dials 999, when asked what service she requires, she calmly tells the operator she has killed her husband, so isn’t sure which service should be sent for this. A short time later the police arrive to find Maria standing outside her big fancy house holding a chair leg with blood on her hands, on the end of the chair leg is hair and blood, paramedics arrive a few minutes later, followed by DI Anton.
At this stage we as readers have no idea why Maria has done such a thing, what has driven her to try and kill her husband, yes she thought he was dead, but turns out he is still alive, but with life altering injuries that mean he will need 24 hour care for the rest of his life, he will never be able to communicate again.
The rest of the story is told through two points of view, the first being Maria guiding the reader through how she met her husband, and what her eighteen years of married life with him has been like,
 but at the same time her thoughts, and feelings throughout the trial, for attempting to murder her




husband Edward. The trial is so well scripted you could be sitting in the gallery yourself watching th
e events unfold. 
The other point of view is that of one of the jurors Charlotte ‘Lottie’ Hiraj a twenty six year old female, married to Zain, and mother to a three year old son. What I thought was clever in the story is to some extent some of Lottie’s life experiences are similar to Maria’s. Although obviously she is a lot younger, and hasn’t been married as long, but the writing links the two together in some of the behaviours shown. There is more going on but to say too much would give too much away and this is a book to really enjoy. The subject matter can be hard but it is handled well.
This is a gripping read, not sure which way the jury will go, the deliberations, along with a few twists and turns you really don’t see coming. So this was my top read in September.


My Second favourite book of September is :


This was the first book I had ever read by Emma Curtis and it really didn’t disappoint. Although the beginning I did find a little slow, but that may be because I enjoy a fast paced story. Nick proposed to Grace one day and the following day he disappeared, they had been together for seven years. The police believe that he had just left Grace, but that made no sense, she knows Nick and knows he wouldn’t just do that . That is until it’s clear he has been keeping secrets from his past. So how well did she really know Nick? Grace is determined to find out the truth no matter how hard, or how dangerous it could be. This story is told through multiple characters points of view, from when Nick is missing, Grace going over things, as well as what’s happening in the present time. With alternate chapters being flashbacks to Nicks teenage years, and a tragedy, which is what has basically shaped him. The characters are believable and relatable, some are nicer than others. This is one of those books you just can’t put down, it is so well written, and it does keep you guessing, despite there not being many of the usual twists you get in most psychological thrillers, it wasn’t easy to figure out.


My third and final of my top three books is:


This book isn’t actually due for release until the 10th October but I really enjoyed this one and as I read it in September I wanted to add it to my favourite 3 books read in September. This is written as if the person is writing a letter but it’s not like looking at a letter, you know Daniel is writing to someone named Lucy but you don’t know who Lucy is. The story unfolds brilliantly Daniel telling his story to whoever Lucy is, at times it is quite moving, at times it is quite creepy, but it is a brilliant book that I urge people to read. I absolutely loved this one.

I read a lot more books in September and reviewed them all which you can read on my wordpress blog site, but these were my top three of the month.
Happy Reading for October.