Monthly Archives: December 2023

#BookReview ‘Gregor and the Curse of the Warmbloods’ by Suzanne Collins #fantasy #adventure

A plague is circulating in the Underland and every warm-blooded creature may die. In the third book in the Suzanne Collins series, Gregor and the Curse of the Warmbloods, hero Gregor returns to Regalia, the land below New York, to find people he loves are dying of the deadly disease. Suzanne CollinsThe world below the streets seems familiar now and it’s great to see Gregor join up again with familiar characters; rats Ripred and Lapblood, cockroach Temp and human Vikus, newcomers Hamnet and his blue-green giant lizard, Frill, and a surprise appearance by someone thought lost. After listening to the Prophecy of Blood – as undecipherable as the previous prophecies – Gregor, without his bonded bat Ares who is desperately ill with the plague, sets off on his quest to find the starshade plant. Thought to be the only cure for the plague, it is said to grow in the dangerous Vineyard of Eyes. The team must survive poisonous plants – it’s a struggle for Gregor to get his little sister Boots to understand she mustn’t touch the pretty flowers – deadly jungle animals and the ferocious cutters, five foot long and two foot tall red ants.
Themes of selflessness, empathy and courage run throughout these books as Gregor is forced to confront wrong assumptions he has made, the danger of rushing to judgement, the hurt caused by making casual ill-thought throwaway statements, and the truth of his own nature. Can he set free his inner ‘rager’ to defend his friends and sister when the cutters attack. And will the Regalians admit how their past behaviour in the Underland has caused some of the hatred and resentment with the other peoples that live there.
The Underland books are about family, siblings, parents and also the extended family of friends and neighbours. As this book draws to a close, the fourth instalment is anticipated as Gregor’s family is once again under threat. But help may come from the most unexpected places.

Here are my reviews of the other books in the series:-
GREGOR THE OVERLANDER #1UNDERLANDCHRONICLES
GREGOR AND THE PROPHECY OF BANE #2UNDERLANDCHRONICLES
GREGOR AND THE MARKS OF SECRET BY SUZANNE COLLINS #4THEUNDERLANDCHRONICLES
GREGOR AND THE CODE OF CLAW #5UNDERLANDCHRONICLES

And try the first paragraph of THE HUNGER GAMES, also by Suzanne Collins.

If you like this, try:-
The Magician King’ by Lev Grossman #2THEMAGICIANS
The Girl in the Tower by Katherine Arden #2WINTERNIGHT
The Secret Commonwealth’ by Philip Pullman #2THE BOOK OF DUST

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview GREGOR AND THE CURSE OF THE WARMBLOODS by Suzanne Collins https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6P5 via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Stephen Spotswood

#BookReview ‘The War of the Worlds’ by HG Wells #classic #scifi

A story so well-known but how many of us have read the original HG Wells novel The War of the Worlds? I hadn’t, until now. Tempted in a bookshop to pick up the Penguin paperback, I’m glad I turned away from the 2005 Tom Cruise film, the 2019 BBC series, the 1938 Orson Welles radio drama that cause such a panic, and Jeff Wayne’s musical drama featuring the voice of Richard Burton. HG WellsSet at the end of the 19th century, this is the story of one man’s experience when an alien capsule lands on Horsell Common near Woking in Surrey. The story builds slowly, as information on the ground spreads slowly. No television, no radio, no internet to disseminate the news of invasion and imminent danger from the strange creatures which emerge from metal cylinders sent to earth. While people die and towns burn in Surrey, a few miles north unknowing Londoners party, eat out, go to work, to the theatre, make love. The narrator, an un-named Londoner, whose wife is considered to be safe in Leatherhead, is driven solely by his need to be reunited with her. He witnesses things he can never have imagined, technology beyond the knowledge of man, but longs to find his wife. But events push him in other directions and into the company of strangers; a timid curate who hides his fear in drink and food, a fantasist artilleryman who imagines a post-apocalyptic world. He sees the bravery, and destruction of, small groups of British military. In central London, the narrator’s brother knows nothing of the Martian tripod fighting machines to the south until, reading of the threat in newssheets, he flees the city. Rescuing two ladies in a pony-chaise who are under attack from ruffians, the trio head east towards the coast and evacuation.
The juxtaposition of everyday small details with the monumental aggressive force that has arrived on earth points to man’s inability to look beyond small, personal concerns to the bigger picture. A tendency that Wells would recognise today. Chapter One, The Eve of the War, is through-provoking for this reason. The arrogance of man to assume we know everything about our planet and the wider universe, that we are supreme, that what we do and think is correct.
What an imagination Wells had. This is an amazing depiction of alien invasion. A classic. Read it, if you haven’t already.
The cover shown above is the edition I read, the 2018 Penguin edition, but there are many editions available.

If you like this, try:-
‘The Ship’ by Antonia Honeywell
The Last of Us’ by Rob Ewing
The Choice’ by Claire Wade

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE WAR OF THE WORLDS by HG Wells https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6Vj via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Suzanne Collins

#BookReview ‘The Shadows of London’ by @AndrewJRTaylor #Historical

When a body without a face is discovered on the site of Cat Hakesby’s latest building venture, Whitehall secretary James Marwood is ordered to investigate. The Shadows of London by Andrew Taylor is sixth in the Marwood & Lovett series that started on the night of the Great Fire of London. Andrew TaylorCat’s renovation of a city almshouse is delayed for the coroner’s verdict, putting extreme financial pressure on her architecture business. Marwood soon discovers two possible identities for the dead man – a French tutor to the daughter of the almshouse’s owner, or a civil servant at the Council of Foreign Plantations. Both suspects suggest a foreign connection to the affair. This excellent series about Restoration London is a wonderful portrayal of the squalor, smells and grime of daily reality juxtaposed with the corruption of wealth, power and politics. Stink, disguised by a clove-studded orange pomander. Meanwhile the eye of King Charles II is distracted by a young French newcomer to court, Louise de Keroualle. Surrounded by panders, English and French, who see advantage to a dalliance between monarch and maid of honour, Louise longs for a lost love and attempts in vain to stop the inevitable happening.
Set in 1671, this novel is a wonderful mixture of murder mystery, political thriller, seventeenth-century fashion [gorgeous shoes] and romantic suspense, set in the complex Restoration period. Eleven years after the restoration of King Charles to the throne and five years since the Great Fire, London still bears the marks of destruction. As Marwood investigates the murder, pulled this way and that by the demands of his political paymasters, Cat struggles to find skilled workers when all the ruined City of London is being redeveloped. The plot is complex, with modern echoes to pick up, and Taylor pulls the strings of tension this way and that. I stayed up late to finish it.
Cat remains one of my favourite fictional characters; independent, spiky, steadfast, a little solemn with endless determination. Marwood is alternately frustrating, arrogant and impulsive but also loyal, brave and honest. It is this last quality that is most pressed in The Shadows of London as, finding himself in unfamiliar territory, he questions what he is doing and why. Cat and Marwood are a brilliant pairing.
Excellent.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK AT AMAZON

Read my reviews of the first five books in this series:
THE ASHES OF LONDON #FIREOFLONDON1… and read the first paragraph of THE ASHES OF LONDON.
THE FIRE COURT #FIREOFLONDON2
THE KING’S EVIL #FIREOFLONDON3
THE LAST PROTECTOR #FIREOFLONDON4
THE ROYAL SECRET #FIREOFLONDON5

And a World War Two novel by the same author:-
THE SECOND MIDNIGHT

If you like this, try:-
The Lady of the Ravens’ by Joanna Hickson #1QueensoftheTower
The Drowned City’ by KJ Maitland #1 Daniel Pursglove
Wakenhyrst’ by Michelle Paver

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE SHADOWS OF LONDON by @AndrewJRTaylor https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6Qd via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- HG Wells

#BookReview ‘A Passionate Man’ by Joanna Trollope #familysaga #contemporary

I started A Passionate Man by Joanna Trollope wondering about the identity of the man in the title, and finished it not being entirely sure. There are three men in the story who could fit the label and although I enjoyed the book I finished it feeling incomplete. Joanna TrollopeJoanna Trollope is so good at exploring the experiences faced by couples and families, relationship challenges are emotionally similar despite differences in the ages of the people involved, class, geography, decade or century. In A Passionate Man, published in 1990, she deals with a seemingly happy couple whose lives are rent apart by the death of a parent and the unexpected interest of an amorous colleague. Trollope’s characters are middle class, doctor Archie and teacher Liza Logan live a comfortable life in a covetable house in a Hampshire village. But all is not beautiful in this beautiful setting. A plan to build house on a field causes ruptures between friends and neighbours, locally-born workers struggle to live where they grew up while the elderly die quietly in loneliness. The cosy life of the Logans begins to fracture.
As husband and wife become focussed on their own emotions and needs, the divisions grow to the degree that their three children notice the undercurrents. Grief of a parent is an unexpectedly intense, disorientating experience which makes one question one’s own life, achievements, mistakes, dreams and longings. Trouble can often follow. I found myself becoming irritated by both Archie and Liza, rather than sympathetic, as each struggles with the consequences of their own actions and the other’s. As the family’s fractures deepen to chasms, Trollope’s portrayal of the children however is excellent.
I was left feeling that the ending is rather rushed and convenient and that ‘passionate’ is not the most appropriate adjective. Not my favourite Trollope novel.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK AT AMAZON

Here are my reviews of other Trollope novels:-
A VILLAGE AFFAIR
MUM & DAD
THE CHOIR
THE RECTOR’S WIFE

If you like this, try:-
In the Midst of Winter’ by Isabel Allende
The Marriage Plot’ by Jeffrey Eugenides
In Another Life’ by Julie Christine Johnson

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview A PASSIONATE MAN by Joanna Trollope https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6KA via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Andrew Taylor