Sue Fairhead's Blog, page 10

January 31, 2025

Listening to others (by Joyce Huggett)

Listening to others by Joyce Huggett (Amazon UK link) I was looking through our bookcase of Christian books, and could not remember ‘Listening to others’ by Joyce Huggett. That’s probably because I hadn’t read it since 2007. I’ve reread it in the past couple of weeks, and thought it a well-written, encouraging and interesting book. 
It says on the front (and once or twice in the text) that it’s a sort of companion or sequel to another of the author’s books, ‘Listening to God’. I don’t have that one; it’s out of print, so unless I see...
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Published on January 31, 2025 09:49

January 30, 2025

A vicarage family (by Noel Streatfeild)

A vicarage family by Noel Streatfeild (Amazon UK link) My favourite books by Noel Streatfeild are her novels for children. I’m slowly re-reading my way through them, as I do from time to time. But this month I decided to read the first of her fictionalised biographies, ‘A Vicarage Family’. I last read this in 2014, so it felt like more than time to peruse it again.
I’m not entirely sure why the author decided to tell her story in the third person, featuring a family with different names. Perhaps she was worried about the legal implica...
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Published on January 30, 2025 04:44

January 25, 2025

Sing you home (by Jodi Picoult)

Sing you home by Jodi Picoult (Amazon UK link) I’m always slightly apprehensive when I embark on a new (to me) novel by Jodi Picoult. I know it will be well-written, and that it will cover current issues in ways that will make me think. I know, too, that her characters will mostly be three-dimensional, and that there will be a mixture of positive and negative traits in each. But sometimes the stories are very dark, and I find them too tense for my tastes, even though I keep reading. 
I have just finished ‘Sing you home’, and i...
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Published on January 25, 2025 05:41

January 17, 2025

The queen of new beginnings (by Erica James)

The queen of new beginnings by Erica James (Amazon UK link) I’m slowly re-reading the many novels I have on my shelves by Erica James. I’ve read some of them more than once, and they feel nicely familiar when I re-read. But there are others which I have read only once, when I first acquired them, and for which I have no memory whatsoever. One of the latter group is ‘The queen of new beginnings’, which I read back in 2011. I’ve just reread it, and, on the whole, liked it very much. 
The first character we meet is the rather grumpy Clayton, ...
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Published on January 17, 2025 10:12

January 15, 2025

Beyond Sundays (by Wayne Jacobsen)

Beyond Sundays by Wayne Jacobsen (Amazon UK link) It’s hard to believe that it’s almost two decades since I first came across a book by Wayne Jacobsen. It was under the semi-pseudonym of Jake Colsen, in a book he co-wrote with Dave Coleman. I haven’t been able to find other books by Dave Coleman, but managed to acquire several by Wayne Jacobson. I found them all well-written, sometimes moving, and very readable. 
So I was very pleased to be given one that I didn’t have, ‘Beyond Sundays’, for Christmas. I started reading it at the...
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Published on January 15, 2025 23:25

January 11, 2025

Mary-Lou of the Chalet School (by Elinor M Brent-Dyer)

Mary-Lou of the Chalet School by Elinor M Brent-Dyer (Amazon UK link) In my slow meander through the lengthy ‘Chalet School’ series by Elinor M Brent-Dyer, I reached the one originally numbered 34. I last read ‘Mary-Lou of the Chalet School’ in 2015. It’s not one I remembered much; possibly I didn’t read it all that regularly when I was younger. It’s set in the winter term following on from the previous book, ‘A chalet girl in Kenya’. So it features the second winter of the new Swiss branch of the Chalet School. 
Mary-Lou is one of Brent-Dyer’s stro...
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Published on January 11, 2025 07:38

January 7, 2025

The trouble with goats and sheep (by Joanna Cannon)

The trouble with goats and sheep by Joanna Cannon (Amazon UK link) I hadn’t heard of Joanna Cannon. Apparently ‘The trouble with goats and sheep’ was her debut novel, although she has written others since this was published in 2016. It was allocated for this month’s read for our local book group. We were told it was light-hearted, and a relatively easy read for a busy time of year.
I really wanted to like it. It starts so well. Ten-year-old Grace narrates; she’s an only child who thinks a lot. Sometimes her narration feels more like that of an ad...
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Published on January 07, 2025 10:07

January 3, 2025

Stress family Robinson (by Adrian Plass)

Stress family Robinson by Adrian Plass (Amazon UK link) Since I had decided to re-read Adrian Plass’s fictional books, I turned to the ones I hadn’t read for the longest time. I had remembered the first ‘Stress Family Robinson’ book as quite light-weight, not one of my favourites but still a good read. I was a little shocked to discover that I last read it in 2010. I had not realised it was such a long time ago; more than time to re-read. 
I knew that the story revolved around the Robinson family, although I had forgotten their names. ...
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Published on January 03, 2025 09:34

January 2, 2025

The second form at St Clare's (by Enid Blyton)

Second form at St Clare's by Enid Blyton (Amazon UK link) Since I reread - and enjoyed - the first three ‘St Clare’s’ books by Enid Blyton in the past few months, I decided to try the fourth, ‘The second form at St Clare’s’, which I haven’t read for at least thirty years. There’s a note in the front of my ‘dragon’ paperback saying that I acquired it in April 1970. So it’s perhaps not surprising that it’s starting to fall apart. I must have read it many times in my teens, and it has been borrowed regularly by young friends.
But with a thi...
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Published on January 02, 2025 05:27

January 1, 2025

Scarlet Feather (by Maeve Binchy)

Scarlet Feather by Maeve Binchy (Amazon UK link) In my gradual re-read of the novels by the late Maeve Binchy, roughly in chronological order of publication, I reached ‘Scarlet Feather’. My edition is a hardback with just under 500 pages, so I was a little daunted when I decided to read it at quite a busy time of year.  I last read it in 2017
However, as with many of this author’s books, particularly the later ones, I was quickly drawn into the story, felt empathy with some of the characters, and eager to know what was going t...
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Published on January 01, 2025 06:29