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    Festive Reads!

    Posted on Monday, November 8th, 2010 by Chloe

    I find that there is nothing nicer in the month of December than snuggling down with a good book, especially one with a bit of a Christmassy theme about it! I love a book with a gorgeous Christmas cover as well - I’m a sucker for anything with a bit of snow and a Christmas tree on it if truth be told! I’ve compiled a list of some of my favourite festive reads, old and new, so you can enjoy a Christmas read yourself!

    Please do let us know of any you want added to our festive list, and enjoy!

    Amy Silver - All I Want for Christmas
    “
    Twelve days and counting… It’s Bea’s first Christmas with her baby son, and this year she’s determined to do everything right. But there is still so much to do: the Christmas menu needs refining; her café, The Honey Pot, needs decorating; and she’s invited the whole neighbourhood to a party on Christmas Day. She really doesn’t have time to get involved in two new people’s lives, let alone fall in love… When Olivia gets knocked over in the street, however, Bea can’t help bringing her into The Honey Pot and getting to know her. Olivia’s life is even more hectic than her own, and with her fiancé’s entire family over from Ireland for Christmas, she shouldn’t be lingering in the cosy warmth of Bea’s café. Chloe, on the other hand, has nowhere else to go. Her affair with a married man has alienated her friends, and left her lonelier than ever. But Christmas is a magical time, and in the fragrant atmosphere of The Honey Pot, anything can happen: new friends can be made, hearts can heal, and romance can finally blossom…”

    Annie Sanders - The Xmas Factor
    “Meet two women with two totally different approaches to the festive season. Beth: it’s only September and already she has performance anxiety. Not surprising when she has agreed to lay on the annual Christmas Eve village bash - the piece de resistance of her husband’s former wife - not to mention having to host Christmas for his difficult offspring. New to this frenzied build-up to the festivities, Beth begins to lose sight of what it all means. To her the Christmas lights are looking more like the headlamps of an oncoming train. Carol: glamorous magazine editor, who put her aspirational Christmas issue to bed sometime in July and is so involved in finding a scoop to save her ailing magazine that she fails to notice the impending festive rush. Panicked and wracked with guilt, she is determined to make it a picture perfect time for her little boy and, opting for convenience, books a lovely-sounding cottage in a quaint village. Even the best laid plans have a habit of unravelling - and no plan at all is a recipe for disaster. So when these two Christmases collide, it looks like it’s going to be anything but goodwill towards men…”

    Kate Harrison - The Secret Shopper Unwrapped
    “
    Christmas is coming, and while the bells are ringing, the tills aren’t. But Sandie - the rising star of the retail spying world - is busier than ever, rooting out the best and worst in festive customer care through her company. The former Charlie’s Shopping Angels are helping out, too. Glamorous widow Grazia is going undercover under the duvet at boutique hotels, in between dating a succession of toyboys and trying to remember which lie she’s told about her age. Meanwhile, not-quite-yummy mummy Emily investigates the child-friendliness of the high street with the help of three-year-old Freddie, when she’s not working flat out with her partner to save their fledging village shop from the un-festive credit crunch. The shoppers are back, but is the happiness they’ve worked so hard for, about to disappear faster than a Louis Vuitton handbag in the Harrod’s sale?”

    Ann Pearlman - The Christmas Cookie Club
    “
    What would we do without one another? It was a statement, not a question. Each of us knew the answer for herself. Every year on the first Monday of December, Marnie and her twelve closest girlfriends gather with batches of beautifully wrapped homemade cookies. Everyone has to bring a dish and a bottle of wine and, as they eat, they take turns telling the story of the cookies they have baked. Stories that, somehow, are always emblematic of the year that has just passed. This year, the stories are especially important. Marnie’s oldest daughter has a risky pregnancy. Will she find out tonight how that story will end? Jeannie’s father is having an affair with her best friend. Who else knew about the betrayal? Rosie’s husband doesn’t want children, but can she live with his decision? Each woman, each friend has a story to tell. The Cookie Club is about the passion and hopefulness of a new romance, the betrayal and disillusionment some relationships bring, the joys and fears of motherhood, and above all, it’s a celebration of the friendships between women.”

    Trisha Ashley - The Twelve Days of Christmas
    “Christmas has always been a sad time for young widow Holly Brown, so when she’s asked to look after a remote house on the Lancashire moors, the opportunity to hide herself away is irresistible – the perfect excuse to forget about the festivities. Sculptor, Jude Martland, is determined that this year there will be no Christmas after his brother runs off with his fiancée and he is keen to avoid the family home. However, he will have to return by the twelfth night of the festivities, when the hamlet of Little Mumming hold their historic festivities and all of his family are required to attend. Meanwhile, Holly is finding that if she wants to avoid Christmas, she has come to the wrong place. When Jude unexpectedly returns on Christmas Eve he is far from delighted to discover that Holly seems to be holding the very family party he had hoped to avoid. Suddenly, the blizzards come out of nowhere and the whole village is snowed in. With no escape, Holly and Jude get much more than they bargained for – it looks like the twelve days of Christmas are going to be very interesting indeed!”

    Julia Williams - Last Christmas
    “It’s the most wonderful time of year. Isn’t it? Discover the true spirit of Christmas with this seasonal treat for fans of Love, Actually and The Holiday. Discover the true spirit of Christmas…Catherine Tinsall is dreading Christmas. As the ‘Happy Homemaker’ she is an online sensation, but the reality couldn’t be more different. With Catherine’s marriage in tatters, her children running wild and her mother increasingly forgetful, seasonal cheer is running low. Husband Noel also hides a secret: he’s facing the axe at work. Until he chances upon the village of Hope Christmas, deep in the Shropshire countryside, which could be the second chance he’s searching for. If he can save it from the developers! In Hope Christmas itself, schoolteacher Marianne Moore is trying to heal her battered heart. But Christmas is a time for families, and memories of what she’s lost haunt her at every turn. Meanwhile, Gabriel North faces a lonely Christmas but hides his sadness for the sake of his son. Will his wife ever come home? Or does love lie elsewhere? All four need a Christmas miracle. And it might just happen - courtesy of a mysterious guardian angel ! Forced to reassess their lives, will Catherine, Noel, Marianne and Gabriel discover what the meaning of Christmas really is? An irresistible gift of a tale that will warm the hearts of Christmas-lovers and Scrooges alike!”

    Patricia Scanlan - Coming Home
    “Two sisters…two very different lives. Alison’s American dream is in tatters. Her highflying career is on the skids in the financial meltdown. Her Upper East Side apartment is now way beyond her means . But pride prevents her from telling her family back home just how bad things are. Olivia is fraught trying to juggle family, career, preparations for Christmas and organize a surprise party for their mother’s seventieth birthday. How she envies, and sometimes resents, her sister Alison and her life of excitement and affluence in New York. Coming home is the last thing Alison wants to do, especially now that she’s met a rather attractive, sexy, down to earth neighbour who doesn’t believe in ‘non exclusive dating’ unlike her wealthy boyfriend, Jonathan. But family ties are strong. Alison and Olivia sort their differences, the party throws up a few surprises and Christmas brings changes for Alison that she could never have imagined before coming home”

    Sheila O’Flanagan - A Season to Remember
    In this wonderful collection of interlinked short stories Sheila O’Flanagan brings her own trademark sparkle to Christmas – a time when friends, families and lovers traditionally come together and when every person is hoping their wishes will come true…

    Sharon Owens - A Winter’s Wedding
    Love in the bleak mid-winter . . . Emily loves Dylan.And Dylan loves Emily.Their relationship is rock solid.Everyone says they are meant to be together, it’s just a matter of when – not if – Dylan’s going to pop the Big Question. There’s just one tiny fly in the ointment: Emily hates weddings. Which is fair enough seeing as she was jilted at the altar years ago by Alex, her supposed soulmate.Still, Dylan isn’t Alex.He’s gorgeous and sexy and scruffy and kind – and more than worth taking a chance on … But what happens when the ghost of Emily’s Christmas past threatens to ruin everything? Can Dylan convince the love of his life he’s different and that their wedding day will be remembered for the right reasons? After all, with a sprinkling of snow and a touch of magic in the air, there’s nothing quite like a winter’s wedding to warm the soul …




    Posted in Admin | 3 Comments »

    American Saturdays Book Review: Second Hand Heart by Catherine Ryan Hyde

    Posted on Saturday, November 6th, 2010 by Danielle

    Vida is 19 and has never had much of a life. Struggling along with a life-threatening heart condition, her whole life has been one long preparation for death. But suddenly she is presented with a donor heart, and just in time. Now she gets to do something she never imagined she’d have to do: live.

    Richard is a 36-year-old man who’s just lost his beloved wife, Lorrie, in a car accident. Still in shock and not even having begun the process of grieving, he is invited to the hospital to meet the young woman who received his wife’s donor heart.

    Vida takes one look at Richard and feels she’s loved him all her life. And tells him so. Richard assumes she’s just a foolish young girl. And maybe she is. Or maybe there’s truth behind the theory of cellular memory, and maybe it really is possible for a heart to remember, at least for a time, on its own.

    Second Hand Heart is both a story of having to learn to live for the first time, and having to learn to live all over again.

    Vida means “Life” in Spanish. Ironic enough, the actual Vida has a life that revolves around death, or at the very least the almost near certainty of it in her near future. When Vida is suddenly given a second chance at the hand of another she does what comes naturally, she seeks out the one her new heart has lost - Richard. It’s Richard’s loss and Vida’s gain that moves them both forward in life, their paths intertwining, but not exactly in the ways you’d expect. Both seeking something just beyond their grasp, but more important than either can comprehend in their current situations. Life.

    Obviously I’d be remiss to fail to mention how Second Hand Heart initially drew me in because of its similarities to the popular movie, Return to Me. It’s one of my favorites. But outside of the fact that both the book and the movie have heart transplant patients as the central character and a love story of sorts, they truly are very different. One major difference being that Richard, the husband who lost his wife chooses to remain in open contact with whomever receives his late wife’s organs. This is crucial, because were it not for this very unique interaction between Vida and Richard the story could be completely different. Both are excellent though, mind you.

    Vida. Her character was so well developed. Honestly. You could tell from the very beginning she’d had a lot of time to think. She was okay with death, which for most of us is quite the opposite. Once she’s given the opportunity to be free of this daily burden she hardly knows what to do with herself, and it’s evident even in the way she speaks. In the beginning of the story you almost want to shake her, she’s so passive. After a while though I came to realize that was just another way of coping, of helping those around her deal with the death she’s already come to grips with. After her life “begins” she’s like a kindergartener asking a thousand questions, making demands, and always seeming to wander aimlessly but with a purpose. By the end, she finally comes to a certain easiness with her new life and I loved the transformation.

    Richard was a completely different situation all together for me. I felt like I could relate so well to him in so many situations. His fear for his wife’s heart now in Vida’s small body and his utter confusion at how to proceed with life. I think so many of us are like this. We live life taking for granted the things we hold most dear, until one day they are just gone. Most of us don’t get the opportunity for long good-byes like Vida thought she had, although I’m not sure it entirely matters. I think what I was reminded of most with Richard was the importance of truly loving those we care for like we may not see them even a few moments later. Make sure we appreciate them, tell them and be mindful of them. Because you never know.

    Second Hand Heart was more than a story about a girl who got a second take on life and fell in love because of it. It’s about living and appreciating and loving. Never letting go, but remembering that life stops for no one. Both Vida and Richard had incredible journeys to struggle through, both extremely different in ways and so similar in others. And once they’d realized they needed each other, they were finally able to move forward and live.


    Thank you so much to the author, Catherine Ryan Hyde, for providing a copy of her book for review! I’m also giving away a Signed Copy of her other new release, Jumpstart the World at my other site, There’s A Book, and the competition is open internationally! So please stop by!
    Stop by The Teen {Book} Scene for more details and other tour stop locations!

    Find out how you can “Jumpstart the World”: Five Ways to Jumpstart the World

    Posted in 2010 releases, American Saturday, Book Reviews, Rating: 5/5 | 2 Comments »

    American Saturdays Book News: Falling Home by Karen White

    Posted on Saturday, November 6th, 2010 by Danielle

    Just out this week is Karen White’s Falling Home! I saw the cover and then the synopsis and was immediately intrigued. A scandal between sisters, inheritance arguments and all centered around a historic homes. It sounds like a great read! This is one I’m definitely hoping to read in the very near future. Take a look:

    In Falling Home, Cassie Madison is pulled away from her fast-track career, her Upper West Side apartment and her metrosexual fiance by the news that her father has suffered a heart attack. He knows he is dying and wants both of his daughters home by his side. Cassie left Walton fifteen years ago with no plans to return after Joe, the man she loved, eloped with her sister Harriet.
    Cassie can barely handle being with her sister, let alone Joe. Yet, there is no way she can keep her distance from them, not as her father lay dying and not with Aunt Lucinda, who helped raise the girls after their mother’s death, looking on. News hat the family home has been willed solely to Cassie creates a new rift when she announces her plans to sell the house and its contents as soon as possible. Even long-time family friend Sam Parker, the town’s only physician and an admirer of Cassie since high school, can’t convince her to delay her decision. Soon, Cassie and her inheritance are at the center of the struggle between developers and the preservationists fighting to protect the small town’s sensibility and historic homes.

    Posted in American Saturday, Book News | No Comments »

    Book Review: Sinful Deceptions by Zoe Miller

    Posted on Friday, November 5th, 2010 by Leah

    Alix Berkeley, the glamorous, Paris based make-up artist, is about to step onto the international stage with the launch of her signature brand of cosmetics. Successful beyond her dreams, it seems that nothing can stop her stellar rise to the top. Until a mistake from her past returns to haunt her.

    Her sister Emma Colgan lives in an affluent Dublin suburb and appears to have it all. But after years of playing the role of devoted wife and mother, she longs for her old self and a sense of excitement. Then, one night, she does something that will shake her family to its very core.

    As Alix’s glitzy launch night in Paris draws near, secrets the two sisters fought to hide begin to emerge and both are about to discover just how much their reckless mistakes have cost them.
    (more…)

    Posted in 2010 releases, Book Reviews, Rating: 3/5 | 2 Comments »

    Chick Lit Classics: Can You Keep A Secret? by Sophie Kinsella

    Posted on Thursday, November 4th, 2010 by Leah

    Chick Lit Classics is a regular feature on Chick Lit Reviews where we highlight the books we feel are classics of the chick lit genre. Feel free to discuss our choices in the comments section!

    This week I’ve picked another Kinsella novel for our Chick Lit Classic because, quite frankly, all of Kinsella’s novels are must-reads for Chick Lit fans! Can You Keep A Secret? was one of my earlier Kinsella reads and I was laughing out loud all the way through. Sure it’s probably predictable but it’s good predictable and the ride is very much worth it. It would make a fantastic film and if you haven’t read it, I urge you to do so!

    Emma is like every girl in the world. She has a few little secrets. Secrets from her mother: 1.I lost my virginity in the spare bedroom to Danny Nussbaum while Mum and Dad were downstairs watching Ben Hur. …From her boyfriend: 2. I’m a size twelve. Not a size eight, like Connor thinks. 3. I’ve always thought Connor looks a bit like Ken. As in Barbie and Ken. …From her colleagues: 4. When Artemis really annoys me, I feed her plant orange juice. (Which is pretty much every day) 5. It was me who jammed the copier that time. In fact, all the times. …Secrets she wouldn’t share with anyone in the world: 6. My G string is hurting me. 7. I faked my Maths GCSE grade on my CV. 8. I have no idea what NATO stands for. Or even what it is… …until she spills them all to a stranger on a plane. At least, she thought he was a stranger…

    Posted in Chick Lit Classics | 6 Comments »

    Cover Stories: Ali McNamara

    Posted on Thursday, November 4th, 2010 by Leah

    A brand new feature on Chicklitreviews.com is Cover Stories! We have noticed that book covers are a huge part of a books appeal whether we like to admit it or not, and the age old adage “don’t judge a book by it’s cover” is less relevant now than it has ever been! Therefore, we’ve taken it upon ourselves for this new feature to quiz a whole lot of chick lit authors, some who have been around the genre for a good few years, some debut authors, about the importance of their book covers, and what they mean to them. We hope you like the feature!

    This week debut novelist Ali McNamara is telling us all about her wonderful cover for From Notting Hill With Love… Actually which is released on 25th November. It’s a stunning book - one of my favourites of the year in fact! - and the cover truly is something special, so here’s Ali to tell you all about it…

    I love the cover of my novel ‘From Notting Hill with Love…Actually.’

    I had no idea just what the design team at Little, Brown would come up with for my book. As a debut author I wasn’t consulted on the cover design, I was just praying it was not yellow or orange - my two least favourite colours! But when I saw the finished article for the first time I was speechless – most unusual for me! I adore it and think they’ve done a brilliant job.

    The cover features the Coronet cinema in Notting Hill Gate (the same one in the movie Notting Hill where Hugh Grant has to watch a movie with Julia Roberts in his diving goggles), and then in the foreground a couple messing about with a bag of popcorn. I like the way the couple are posed to look very much like Mark and Bridget in the final scene of Bridget Jones’ Diary. I like to think this is deliberate as this is one of the many movies that feature in the novel.

    The back cover shows a silhouette of a couple sitting in the back row of a cinema, again eating popcorn! Movies are a big theme of the book as you can tell by the title and all the popcorn references. The only thing I asked to be changed when I saw the proof cover for the first time was the original girl on the front cover had red hair, when my main character, Scarlett has black hair because she’s named after Scarlett O’Hara from the Hollywood classic Gone with the Wind.

    Even the title is in keeping with the novel, both on the cover and on the spine. It’s black and red - the colours of the London street signs, which is where most of the story takes place. Although the characters do venture across to Paris at one point and have some interesting encounters with some rather iconic film stars there…

    So how do I feel about the cover of my debut novel?

    I totally love it…actually.

    Thanks Ali!

    Posted in Cover Stories | 2 Comments »

    Book Review: Ambition by Immodesty Blaize

    Posted on Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010 by Chloe

    Sienna Starr is grateful for what being the daughter of burlesque star Tyger Starr brings her, but also wants to break out on her own. She loves being a chorus girl in a dancing show, but is determined to be a star in her own right, and shine as the lead dancer. Unfortunately, Sienna seems to have made an enemy of the show’s leading lady Brandy Alexander, and she’s determined to make Sienna’s life hell, not wanting her to take any shine off Brandy herself. However, when someone from Brandy’s past shows up and threatens to wreck everything she has worked hard for, how far will Brandy go to protect herself? Will Sienna be able to reach her dreams of being a leading lady herself, and sort of her own personal demons with boyfriend Max too? When does too much ambition become a bad thing?

    (more…)

    Posted in 2010 releases, Book Reviews, Rating: 4/5 | 1 Comment »

    Author Interview: Julie Cohen

    Posted on Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010 by Leah

    Last week I finally got to read Getting Away With It, the first Julie Cohen novel written for Headline Review. I thought it was stunning, and when I got the chance to interview Julie I jumped at it and got my questions off to her as quick as I could! Here are her answers, enjoy!

    1. Tell us about your first Headline Review novel Getting Away With It?

    It’s the story of Liza Haven, an LA stunt woman whose career goes quite violently wrong. She returns to the village of Stoneguard, Wiltshire, where she grew up (and where she couldn’t wait to escape from) to see her perfect identical twin sister, Lee—only to find that Lee has disappeared. The entire village assumes that Liza is Lee, and Liza plays along with it, to see what it’s like to be the good twin for once. But as she learns more about her sister’s life, she begins to see that nothing is quite as it appears. And she begins to face up to the reality of her own life, and who she really wants to be.

    2. Are you currently working on a new novel? Can you tell us anything about it?

    I just gave in the manuscript for my next novel this week! It’s about a woman who gets a job working as a costumed historical interpreter in a stately home where they’re re-enacting the summer of 1814. There are two story strands—the modern-day one, where the heroine’s life is a bit of a mess, and the pretending-it’s-1814 one, which is a Regency romp. But eventually the two strands start to come together. Like Getting Away With It, it’s romantic and fun but it’s also got sadness to it. I loved doing the research, which involved dressing up and going to Regency re-enactments.

    (more…)

    Posted in Author Interviews | 7 Comments »

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