Veronika Jordan's Blog, page 45
December 4, 2023
Swimming For Beginners by Nicola Gill
Swimming for Beginners will show you how a child can open your heart even if you aren’t a mother.
Loretta has her life under control. She’s chasing a big promotion, she’s marrying the “perfect man” and she has a flawless five-year plan. This plan does not include children.
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But when a complete stranger asks her to watch her six-year-old daughter in an airport and never returns, both their lives will be changed forever.

A little human in fairy wings and sparkly cowgirl boots will turn Loretta’s world upside down and maybe, just maybe, show her exactly what she’s missing.
Overflowing with humour and heartbreak, Nicola Gill takes us on a relatable journey of self-discovery through the power of a child’s love.

My Review
I have nothing in common with Loretta, so why do I see myself in her? I have been married for 40 years, I have children (and grandchildren). I’m not socially awkward, I don’t think, but I do hate forced ‘fun’ events, dread hen dos (all those inane phallic references like it’s the 1970s and we’ve never seen one including our husband-to-be’s), and I hope I’m a team player. Well up to a point. Maybe I’m not. And I cringe when anyone discusses their sex life in public. I will probably have to swap ‘sex’ for ‘love’ or Amazon will reject my review. Oh and I hate PDAs. Get a room. And I make lists. On my phone, in my diary, everywhere. In fact I need a list of my lists.
I felt really sorry for Loretta at work. She’s not weird, she just likes to keep herself to herself and get on with her job. She’s not interested in the inane gabbling of her colleagues. She doesn’t want to ‘swim with the dolphins’ as her prat of a boss refers to being a ‘team player’. Then when she decides she needs to be more sociable, he says she’s taken her eye off the ball. We could all have told you that would happen.
In the meantime, however, she’s at the airport waiting to catch a flight to New York for a very important presentation. Her promotion may depend on it and she needs to prepare. But that’s when she meets six-year-old Phoebe, who can talk for England without pausing for breath. Phoebe’s mum Kate is similar. Then Kate asks Loretta to watch Phoebe for a few minutes while she goes to the toilet, but she doesn’t return. And that’s when the story really begins.
Somehow, Loretta has found herself in the middle of a crisis, and she seems to be the only one who can help. Phoebe’s gran Sylvia thinks she’s too old to take care of Phoebe (she’s only 62). And Phoebe likes Loretta, though goodness knows why. She hasn’t a clue how to take care of a small child, let alone swim with the Little Fishes. The dolphins aren’t going that well either.
This book broke my heart so many times, mainly for Phoebe, but also for Loretta. Phoebe discovered that there are people around who can give you love, while Loretta found out that the work-life balance is important too. I wouldn’t want anyone who doesn’t have or want children to think it’s the only way, but it worked for Loretta.
Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours

About the Author
Nicola Gill lives in London with her husband and two sons. At the age of five, when all of the other little girls wanted to be ballet dancers, she decided she wanted to be an author. Her ballet teacher was very relieved. When she’s not at her desk, you can usually find Nicola reading, cooking up vast vats of food for friends and family or watching box sets. Occasionally she even leaves the house…

December 1, 2023
Another Year Over by Eliza Hope-Brown Publication Party
Christmas is coming and for Holly Coleman, it’s looking less than joyous.
The worst year of her life, culminating in a conversation with her boss casting uncertainty about her job in the New Year, has left Holly feeling more flat than festive.

Will the magic of Christmas find Holly in time or is she destined to be like a strand of Christmas lights that have lost their twinkle – tangled, forgotten and shoved aside – next year’s problem?
Genre: Contemporary/literary
Pages: 78 Novella

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The Paper Pirate by Dawn McIntyre Out Now
As if the looming deadline to pay off a balloon mortgage isn’t enough to worry about, the five partners who own the small town book store The Paper Pirate find themselves menaced by a stealthy crook who systematically searches first the shop, then each of their homes.
Because he takes nothing and barely leaves traces of his presence, the police can’t be of much help, and simply promise to keep an eye on Charlie Santorelli, Lavinia “Vinnie” Holcomb, Al Rockleigh, Felicia Cocolo and Lenora Stern.
Genre: Cosy Mystery

It’s a mystery to them but the reader knows that Rick Foster, a shady rare-books dealer and his sidekick Nina Bartov are on the hunt for a particular old volume that sits unnoticed on a shelf in The Paper Pirate’s used book section. It’s an obscure early work of the not-terribly-successful author Benjamin Conway, and it’s badly defaced—but a very wealthy man is willing to pay Rick a half a million dollars for it. Seems an ancestor of his eluded the henchmen of a nineteenth-century dictator by escaping to New York, and eventually took refuge in the northeastern Pennsylvania countryside. Before he was captured and killed, he’d scribbled as much evidence of the tyrant’s sins as he could fit into the blank spaces of a copy of The Stargazer at Dawn and hid it where he hoped his comrades would find it. They never did.
The five friends also are members of a writers’ group, and each of them has a secret. One is penning an erotic novel on the sly, another hides a painful estrangement with an only child, and a deadly teenaged mistake causes a third to sabotage her every chance at happiness in the present. A partner who claims to be unpublished actually is a one-hit-wonder with a thirty-year-old best-selling novel followed by a crippling literary failure, and the last has a family with criminal connections—he’s spent half a lifetime avoiding them.

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November 30, 2023
Soldier’s Don’t Go Mad by Charles Glass Extract
A brilliant and poignant history of the friendship between two great war poets, Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen, alongside a narrative investigation of the origins of PTSD and the literary response to World War I.
The outbreak of war across across Europe in 1914, ushered in a new and unprecedented era of modern warfare. Soldiers faced relentless machine-gun fire, incredible artillery power, flame-throwers, and gas attacks. Within the first four months of the First World War, the British Army recorded the nervous collapse of ten percent of its officers.
During the war, Craiglockhart Hospital treated around 1800 officers with shell-shock. And it was here that two of the world’s greatest war poets met — Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon. Despite differences in age, class, education, and interests, both were outsiders – soldiers unfit to fight, gay men in a homophobic country, and Britons unwilling to support the war.
But more than anything else, they shared a love of the English language and poetry. As their friendship evolved over their months as patients at Craiglockhart, each encouraged the other in their work, in their personal reckonings with the morality of war, as well as in their treatment. The friendship acted as doctor, nursing them to both health and creative achievement.

Drawing on rich source materials, as well as Glass’s own deep understanding of trauma and war, Soldiers Don’t Go Mad tells for the first time the story of the soldiers and doctors who struggled with the effects of industrial warfare on the human psyche. Writing beyond the battlefields, to the psychiatric couch of Craiglockhart but also the literary salons, halls of power, and country houses, Glass charts the experiences of Owen and Sassoon, and of their fellow soldier-poets, alongside the greater literary response to modern warfare.
Written in the midst of the pandemic, when Charles Glass was hospitalised with Covid-19, Soldier’s Don’t Go Mad provided his own literary solace. Gripping, thorough and informative, Soldier’s Don’t Go Mad is this winter’s essential read.
Extract
And it’s been proved that soldiers don’t go mad
Unless they lose control of ugly thoughts
That drive them out to jabber among the trees.
—Siegfried Sassoon,
“Repression of War Experience,” 1917
“Many of the broken men recorded their experiences in diaries, letters, illustrations, and poems. Two young officers treated for shell shock, Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen, rank among the finest poets of the war. Yet much of their verse would not have been written but for their psychotherapy. Chance brought the two poets together, and chance assigned each to a psychiatrist suited to his particular needs.
“These analysts acted as midwives to their works by interpreting their nightmares, clarifying their thoughts, and encouraging them in their creations. Owen, who in another context might have been left to languish in trauma, benefited from intensive therapy under Dr. Arthur Brock. Brock’s interest in science, sociology, folklore, Greek mythology, and nature studies accorded with Owen’s. It was Brock who expanded Owen’s horizons and gave him the self-confidence to tackle sundry outside tasks and restore his mental balance. Sassoon, in contrast, enjoyed intellectual engagement with his psychiatrist, Dr. William Halse Rivers, who did not trouble him with the outside activities that Brock imposed on Owen. Had Rivers treated Owen and Brock been responsible for Sassoon, this would have been a different story. Had both young officers been sent to different hospitals, they would not have met, and the poems they wrote would have been vastly different from the masterpieces the world knows.”
About the Author
Charles Glass is an American-British author, journalist, broadcaster and publisher. He was ABC News chief Middle East correspondent from 1983 to 1993, and has worked as a correspondent for Newsweek and The Observer. He is the author of Americans in Paris, Tribes with Flags, and The Northern Front: An Iraq War Diary, among other books.
[image error]The New York Review of Books, Harper's Magazine and elsewhere.","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"charles-glass-c-george-glass","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="charles-glass-c-george-glass" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="A former Middle East correspondent for ABC News, Charles Glass has written for The New York Review of Books, Harper’s Magazine and elsewhere.
" data-medium-file="https://cookiebiscuit.files.wordpress.com/2023/11/charles-glass-c-george-glass-3c7fd016cbb585bd536deefa7cbf624f6b443d83.jpg?w=300" data-large-file="https://cookiebiscuit.files.wordpress.com/2023/11/charles-glass-c-george-glass-3c7fd016cbb585bd536deefa7cbf624f6b443d83.jpg?w=670" src="https://cookiebiscuit.files.wordpress.com/2023/11/charles-glass-c-george-glass-3c7fd016cbb585bd536deefa7cbf624f6b443d83.jpg?w=670" alt="" class="wp-image-18581" srcset="https://cookiebiscuit.files.wordpress.com/2023/11/charles-glass-c-george-glass-3c7fd016cbb585bd536deefa7cbf624f6b443d83.jpg 670w, https://cookiebiscuit.files.wordpress.com/2023/11/charles-glass-c-george-glass-3c7fd016cbb585bd536deefa7cbf624f6b443d83.jpg?w=150 150w, https://cookiebiscuit.files.wordpress.com/2023/11/charles-glass-c-george-glass-3c7fd016cbb585bd536deefa7cbf624f6b443d83.jpg?w=300 300w" sizes="(max-width: 670px) 100vw, 670px" />A former Middle East correspondent for ABC News, Charles Glass has written for The New York Review of Books, Harper’s Magazine and elsewhere.November 28, 2023
The Leftover Woman by Jean Kwok
An evocative family drama and a riveting mystery about the ferocious pull of motherhood for two very different women–from the New York Times bestselling author of Searching for Sylvie Lee and Girl in Translation.
Jasmine Yang arrives in New York City from her rural Chinese village without money or family support, fleeing a controlling husband, on a desperate search for the daughter who was taken from her at birth–another female casualty of China’s controversial One Child Policy. But with her husband on her trail, the clock is ticking, and she’s forced to make increasingly desperate decisions if she ever hopes to be reunited with her daughter.
Meanwhile, publishing executive Rebecca Whitney seems to have it all: a prestigious family name and the wealth that comes with it, a high-powered career, a beautiful home, a handsome husband, and an adopted Chinese daughter she adores. She’s even hired a Chinese nanny to help her balance the demands of being a working wife and mother. But when an industry scandal threatens to jeopardize not only Rebecca’s job but her marriage, this perfect world begins to crumble and her role in her own family is called into question.
The Leftover Woman finds these two unforgettable women on a shocking collision course. Twisting and suspenseful and surprisingly poignant, it’s a profound exploration of identity and belonging, motherhood and family. It is a story of two women in a divided city–separated by severe economic and cultural differences yet bound by a deep emotional connection to a child.

My Review
What is a leftover woman?
“in China,” says Jasmine,”I’d seen posters warning girls of the danger of becoming leftover women, women that no one wanted. Leftover like scraps on a table, uneaten food, both a sacrilege and wasteful…. I was a leftover woman, I realised. After everyone else had carved away what they wanted to see in me and taken what they desired, I was all that was left.”
But the root of this story is the one-child policy in China. For many families if the first born was a baby girl, she was given away at birth or even left abandoned to die. They could then try again for a boy, a son to pass on the family name, run the business and look after his parents in their old age. This is very hard for us in the west to comprehend. In fact the whole book is out of my field of reference, not just Jasmine, but also Rebecca.
At 14 years old, Jasmine’s parents sold her to Wen, an ‘older’ man (in his mid to late twenties), who wants a wife to bear him a son. They are not legally married, as Jasmine is under age. I cannot imagine selling my child at 14. Jasmine has a baby a few years later – a girl – but she dies almost immediately after birth. We know though, that she didn’t die, she was taken to an orphanage and ‘sold’ to an American couple – Brandon and Rebecca. Brandon, who lived in China for many years and speaks fluent Chinese, is a university lecturer and a close friend of Wen, while Rebecca is an editor at the successful publishing house set up by her late father.
Jasmine finds out that her daughter Fiona (or Fifi), is still alive and living in the Beautiful Country as they call the USA. Her mission is to escape her abusive marriage and get her daughter back. Strangely though, she loves Wen, but then she only ever knew the love of her grandmother who has now died, and the friendship of a young man called Anthony, who Wen does not permit her to see. Wen also loves her, but it’s more of an obsession than love in its truest form.
We then alternate between Jasmine as the first person narrator (the English is perfect as the narrator though her actual English is fairly limited), and Rebecca, who dotes on six-year-old Fifi, but has to work and employs a Chinese nanny. The nanny teaches FiFi to speak Chinese and also introduces her to her own culture. Rebecca is jealous of their closeness. In spite of her success as an editor, Rebecca is suspicious and lacking in confidence. She has no understanding of what it must be like to be an immigrant in a country like America.
I liked both women, with some reservations. I sympathised totally with Jasmine, though I did question her behaviour at times. She is vulnerable, and an outsider in a country that is often racist and judgmental. Rebecca, on the other hand, is also vulnerable, though in her case she appears to have everything, but success and money are not always enough.
It’s an interesting book, beautifully written, which addresses many issues including identity and women’s place in society, whether they are Chinese (or any other nationality) immigrants or white, wealthy middle class. The chapters set in the strip club are horrifying to me, or maybe I’m being naive. The women can earn a fortune, but it’s what they have to do for the money. Are they demeaning themselves or are they empowered while the men are being taken for mugs? I really don’t know the answer.
Many thanks to NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
About the Author
Jean Kwok is the award-winning, New York Times and international bestselling author of The Leftover Woman, Girl in Translation, Mambo in Chinatown, and Searching for Sylvie Lee, which was a Read with Jenna Today Show Pick. Her work has been published in twenty countries and is taught in schools across the world.
She has been selected for numerous honors, including the American Library Association Alex Award, a Goodreads Choice Awards Semi-Finalist for Mystery & Thriller, the Chinese American Librarians Association Best Book Award, an Orange New Writers title, and the Sunday Times Short Story Award international shortlist. She was one of twelve authors asked by the Agatha Christie estate to write an original, authorized Miss Marple story for the collection Marple: Twelve New Mysteries.
She immigrated from Hong Kong to Brooklyn when she was five and worked in a Chinatown clothing factory for much of her childhood. She received her bachelor’s degree from Harvard University and earned an MFA from Columbia University. She divides her time between the Netherlands and New York City.

Learn more about Jean here:
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The Falcon, The Wolf and The Hummingbird by Martha Engber – Out Now
A consummate warrior and brilliant strategist, Pino is a young Native American woman who must fight against fierce invaders to save her tribe — and spirit — from annihilation in precolonial southern New England.
The strange tale of sisterhood begins on the stormy spring morning her tribe faces imminent attack by a contingent of the mighty Pagassett Nation, infamous for destroying small tribes in its quest for land and power. Pino knows this is the moment she’s been waiting for, a chance to save her people and maybe —maybe — redeem herself for failing to rescue her beloved sister, murdered ten summers ago.
Aided by her best warrior and forbidden love, Tow, and key tribal leaders who witness Pino’s gift for camouflage, she clandestinely influences strategy in the short, but wildly intense conflict. She soon discovers her real opposition is Meesha, a beautiful near-slave taken in by the invading tribe when just a girl. By learning how the other operates, the women form an intimate, almost magical sisterhood in their internal fight to free their inner demons.

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Tot Fun Puzzles and Mazes Out Now
Calling All Young Explorers!
Discover over 200 pages filled with diverse challenges for ages 6-12+. Dive into logic puzzles, uncover hidden pictures, navigate intricate mazes, and test your wits with word and number games. Some puzzles? Easy peasy lemon squeezy. Others? As sneaky and tricky as ninja cats in the dark. And for an added touch of fun: every puzzle you solve earns you cupcake points. Keep track and colour in your chart with each point you collect. With beautiful illustrations and vibrant colours on every page, this book is both educational and entertaining. Unlock adventures and learning with Tot Fun!

For Ages: 6-12+
Paperback: 204 Pages
Dimensions: 8.5 x 11 inches
Enchanting Illustrations: Beautiful, whimsical artwork on every page
Vibrant Colors: Delightful shades to spark creativity and fun
Educational & Entertaining: Enhances problem-solving and critical thinking skills
Diverse Challenges: Varied puzzles, including logic, picture, word, number puzzles, and mazes, to enhance multiple skill sets.

About the Author
Tot Fun, an imprint of Anna Conrad, LLC, specializes in creating educational and entertaining puzzle books for children aged 6-12+. Committed to delivering high-quality content, our books bolster problem-solving and critical thinking skills. With the expertise of our extraordinary team of artists, we bring to life the most vibrant colours and enchanting illustrations, ensuring both creative and educational play. Every puzzle and maze is designed to guide young explorers on a journey of discovery, cultivating their curiosity and enhancing their abilities with every challenge.
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November 27, 2023
Boolean Logic by Morgan Christie Extract
Powerful and lyrical essays from a new and noteworthy poet and fiction writer. Morgan Christie’s new book explores current social themes of race, gender inequity, socioeconomic disparities.
How do experiences define us when viewed through a Boolean Logic lens, where sums do not always equal their parts?

These essays intertwine sport, family, and community and how identities are shaped through lineage and the lessons we take from them.

The following is an extract from Boolean Logic
Sewing Dresses
“My grandmother’s hands are steadier than mine, guiding the seams of the cloth the way I used to guide my bounce passes. She starts with the shoulder seams, their connection and even keel are the perfect benchmark for the rest of the dress’s alignment. When she borders the hem, her fingers run next to the beating needle, the presser foot as firm as her own against the pedal I cannot see. She told me to try sewing the zipper, it was easy, a straight shot. My hands run faster than my wind sprints, guiding the thread through the garment and twisting it together like the bungled legs of a defender that didn’t know they weren’t supposed to cross their feet on a side shuffle.
“She touches my shoulder as if to tell me to slow down, but I cannot undo the knot. Its resiliency and attachment to the pattern is unnerving but familiar, something as unmoving as a pick set right or a zone moving in unison.”
About the Author
Morgan Christie’s work has appeared in Room, Hawai’i Review, Sport Literate, and elsewhere. She is the author of four poetry chapbooks and her full-length short story manuscript ‘These Bodies’ (Tolsun Books, 2020) was nominated for the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award in fiction. Her poetry chapbook ‘when they come’ was released by Black Sunflowers Press (2021) and was featured in the Forward Arts Foundation’s National Poetry Day exhibit. She is the 2022 Arc Poetry Poem of the Year Winner and her collection ‘People Without Wings’ is the winner of the 2022 Digging Chapbook Series Prize (Digging Press, 2023). Her essay collection, ‘Boolean Logic’ is the winner of the Howling Bird Book Prize (2023) and her novella ‘Liddle Deaths’ (Stillhouse Press) is due out in 2024.
Author’s Website: www.morganchristiewrites.com
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November 26, 2023
The Marlow Murders by Biba Pearce Detective Rob Miller #7
Debby Morris, mother of two, goes to a Christmas party at historic Hollyhock Manor in Marlow, and never comes home.
A MISSING MOTHER.
Her phone, handbag and Santa’s elf hat are found in a park near the River Thames. The police issue a nationwide search, but Debby is nowhere to be found.
Three weeks later, Debby’s body, still in her elf costume, is discovered five miles downstream from where she disappeared.
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A DETECTIVE ON THE BRINK.
Detective Rob Miller is pulled from compassionate leave and put in charge. He’s still reeling from his last botched case, and he knows all eyes are on him — waiting to see if he’ll crack.
Meanwhile, another body is found with their throat slashed . . . and a link is discovered between the two cases that changes everything.
A RACE AGAINST TIME TO STOP A KILLER.
Rob and his team will need to pull out all the stops to catch a twisted killer before anyone else dies.

My Review
I haven’t read all of the books in the series, but I read The Soho Killer (Rob Miller #6), so the references to the botched case and Jo’s life-threatening injury made sense.
Following the disastrous outcome of the previous case, Detective Rob Miller was put on compassionate leave, while his team was suspended until a decision was made regarding their future. But when mother-of-two Debby Morris goes missing and her body is washed up in the River Thames three weeks later, Miller is pulled back from leave to take charge of the case.
He is ably assisted by his old team, plus PC Trent, a young constable from Marlow, who was first on the scene when the body was discovered, and also has a lot of local knowledge of the area, which Miller does not. Trent also knows (even if it’s just gossip) about the local ‘celebrities’ like Dame Constance Blanchard and dodgy arms dealer Roman Petrovic.
Not long after, a second body is discovered, this time with their throat slashed, and it appears there could be a connection between the two killings. But why would anyone kill Debby? What possible motive could they have?
This was a very fast-paced story, no messing about. I love that this book is so to the point, without any ‘padding’ that seems to be so common nowadays. You are not shouting ‘get on with it’ at the author, because she does. And it’s more exciting because of it.
Many thanks to Biba for inviting me to be on the blog tour.

About the Author.
Biba Pearce is a British crime writer and author of the DCI Rob Miller series. Biba grew up in post-apartheid Southern Africa. As a child, she lived on the wild eastern coast and explored the sub-tropical forests and surfed in shark-infested waters. Now a full-time writer with more than twenty-five novels under her belt, Biba lives in leafy Surrey and when she isn’t writing, can be found walking through the countryside or kayaking on the river Thames.

November 24, 2023
From the Boxing Ring to the Ashram by Deborah Charnes
Drawing on an impressive network of mentors and gurus from around the world, Deborah Charnes has distilled the life lessons they taught her into a collection you won’t want to miss. Some of her teachers are real-life swamis dressed in orange robes. Others don lab coats, army fatigues or boxing gloves. All radiate an inner wisdom that echoes the union of mind, body and spirit.
As a wellness coach, Deborah Charnes has selected tips from their powerful and transformative teachings with her students and clients in mind, those who are seeking ways to boost their flagging mental, physical and spiritual resources. And now they are available to you too in this practical and adaptable guide.
With easy life hacks for improving your overall health and well-being that take as little as ten minutes a day, From the Boxing Ring to the Ashram empowers you to rise above your struggles and conquer your challenges.
This holistic approach to self-improvement is the ultimate guide to finding balance, peace and purpose. So don’t miss out on this unique opportunity to learn from some of the most experienced and insightful teachers of our time.

Genre: Self-Help, Spirituality, Alternative Healing
Publisher: Emerald Lake Books
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