SISTER SCRIBES’ READING ROUND UP: AUGUST

Kitty

The Shelf – Helly Acton

I loved this book, it was a whirlwind of a story picking the reader up and whizzing them through the chapters much as a reality show does with the viewer and it’s episodes. A fabulous debut, it was addictive, quick-witted and I genuinely couldn’t put it down. I loved how the sisterhood of these women shone through as they bonded over their shared experiences regardless of their very different personalities. The book challenged the sexist tropes frequently perpetuated on social media and reality tv and reflected in society today with a clear and necessary message to both our younger and our older selves.  I thoroughly enjoyed it and am really looking forward to this author’s next book.

A Bicycle Built for Sue – Daisy Tate

This book took me through the emotions like you would not believe. Skilfully written, it manages to genuinely combine laugh out loud moments with segments so raw and emotional I had to pause and look away from the book for a bit.

It tackles some serious issues, suicide and self-harm but does so in a way that is both respectful, sincere and empathetic. However, the over-arching nature of this book is feelgood joy. The very opening pages – set in a 111 call-centre – set the tone by being witty, insightful and real.

The story itself is that of three unlikely friends who come together in a moment of adversity and resolve to do something out of the ordinary. They are to do a charity bike ride along Hadrian’s Wall, there are highs and lows, moments of danger and excitement but more importantly our characters learn an awful lot about each other and even more about themselves. This story is about the power of friendship and the characters represent the different stages of life and thus problems and issues we can all relate to, regardless of our age or experience. This book touched my heart and I am more than happy to highly recommend it.

Summer Strawberries at Swallowtail Bay – Katie Ginger

This is a feelgood summer read, with sunshine, strawberries, and a crumbling Manor House. Add a handsome, honourable hero and a heroine who is not afraid to go for what she wants and you have the perfect recipe for a lovely, relaxing read chock full of community and romance. I really enjoyed it.

Jane

Having read all Kitty Wilson’s Cornish Village School books I approached the last one, Happy Ever After, with mixed feelings. While I was looking forward to it I knew it would be my final visit to Penmenna with all those wonderful characters, belly laughs and Cornish sunshine.

Happy Ever After is Marion’s story. Having been the scourge of the PTA – and indeed the village as a whole – for the entire series – finally she took centre stage with a love story quite unlike the ones which went before. I know Kitty is my friend, but her portrayal of a twenty year long relationship rather than a shiny brand new one was sensitive and real, funny and poignant. And for that, I loved this book.

 

 

Meet the doyen of crochet… Barb, for whom it is a passion, which is great for the rest of us.

I received a gift for my soon to be born grandson, yet to be named,  (so each week I call him something different, working my way through the alphabet): I am at F, so he is Ferdinand.

I was absolutely delighted with the bonnet and discovered it  was made by Barb, of I Love to Crochet by Barb. It arrived in a superior blue bag, appropriate for a grandson  and that attention to detail is typical,  I have come to discover, of Barb – designer and crocheter (if there is such a word). Because of course, I had to go to the source and find out more about this lovely product, and what else  Barb makes, and how she originally set up and on… and on…

The answer is Barb makes all sorts, including evening bags so with Christmas coming, and if there are any parties under present circumstances, take a look at these.

Chatting to Barb it quickly became clear that crochet is her passion. When I asked if she knitted as well, Barb explained that once that had been the case, but sadly  Fibromyalgia and other conditions put a stop to that.  Nothing daunted she taught herself to crochet – not as easy as it sounds as she is left handed, especially as she learned from books – as there was no Youtube at that time.

Barb explained that she  loves designing and often creates a free-form hat.  She is happy with a pattern, but likes a challenge so if requested will design to the customer’s brief.  She also crochets for charitable causes and the hats look incredibly snug. I look dreadful in hats, but I do really love the  flower on the side, the size of which can be adjusted.

            

Barb is married to Colin, and is a mum and grandma, but this doesn’t stop her stock items constantly being replenished, though she loves it when customers approach her with their own designs or requirements. She explains that even the stock items can be personalised: think of a cardigan – what colour, with or without a ribbon, or perhaps hand made ribbon roses? All this  goes to create something unique.

                                          

​Barb’s prices are worked out according to the amount of yarn used, the type of yarn, the cost of the ribbon and time taken. Though in all honesty, as Barb says, the time can never really be fully costed because items can take days to  reach the quality she insists upon. 

Is this a chore to her? Certainly not, for let’s not forget Barb loves to crochet, and to please her customers – it is her passion.  

I know ‘Ferdinand’ (what on earth shall  call him when I reach ‘x’?) will be snug as a bug, and look totally cute. I am ordering another from Barb for Duchess Diva Delilah, who is three. Must keep things even.

If you’re interested as we’re nearing the end of August and soon we’ll be into autumn,  do contact Barb. She is a delight, and approachable, and will do all she can to help.

Photos: used with the permission of Barb.

Facebook: I love to Crochet by Barb

Website: www.ilovetocrochetbybarb.com

Email: ilovetocrochetbarb@gmail.com

Email: ilovetocrochetbarb@gmail.com

Facebook: ilovetocrochetbybarb

Please do not hesitate to contact me to ask any questions. I am very happy to telephone you if you email your details.

The Power of Play Geomagworld Educates and Excites

Frost recommends the Geomag Mechanics Magnetic Race Track. It is a fantastic and innovative toy. 

We at Geomag know that it is easier to learn when you are having fun, that is why all of our toys are educational with a fun-spin. It’s the fun aspect which allows a child to play, whilst engaging their mind to learn key skills in the process. Skills such as perseverance, cause and effect, investigation, hand-to-eye coordination, and STEM.

These key skills all play a huge part in daily life and we are committed to ensuring every child learns as much as they can when playing with their innovative sets.

geomag, STEM, stem toys

The Geomag Mechanics Magnetic Race Track Set is a unique, exciting and educational toy, which will provide hours of fun for the whole family. The system is made up of magnetic rods, steel spheres and elements of different shapes such as cylinders and modular parts. When assembled correctly, you can use the force of gravity to create chain reactions for never-ending fun.  The interactive marble run has 115 pieces and will harness the invisible forces of magnetism and gravity through original and surprising means. The spheres inside the circuit are set in motion by an innovative magnetic cannon that uses the force of attraction of the accelerating magnet.  The motion is provided by the invisible forces of Gravity and Magnetism, without using electricity or batteries. The play experience is based on these fundamental principles of physics.

The Geomag Magnetic Race Track 115pc MSRP £29.99 from Amazon.

IMOGEN HOWSON ON THE EVOLUTION OF THE RNA

I joined the Romantic Novelists’ Association in 2008 and went to my first conference that year. As a newish editor (I was working for a digital-first publisher) and a very newly published writer, I was impossibly excited and shy all at once.

The conference had its moments of terror, such as when I went into the bar to find it deserted (where had all my new friends gone?). But these were outweighed by all the moments of friendliness and welcome: as I fled the scarily deserted bar, I walked past an open window to the accommodation block and was hailed by all my new friends, who summoned me to join the kitchen party they were having. And by the time I left on Monday morning, I knew I’d found my people.

For many of the RNA’s longstanding members, it’s important for us to try to make sure any new members we meet end up feeling the same way. We don’t always manage it—we are writers, after all, a typically shy, introverted bunch who only warm up after a glass of wine—but we’re determined to do our best!

For me, that desire to make all new members feel that they’d “found their people”, prompted me to organise the New Writers’ Scheme for several years—until 2019, when I moved on to become the RNA’s Vice-Chair. It also led to my enthusiastic involvement in the RNA’s initiatives to make our organisation a more welcoming and inclusive place for writers from groups currently under-represented in publishing.

The path to traditional publishing for, for instance, ethnic minority writers and LGBTQIA+ writrs (particularly those who write “own voices” books) is disproportionately harder than for straight white writers (and goodness knows, it’s hard enough for them as well!). This means that writing organisations often have a membership that reflects the state of publishing as it is (straight, white, middle-class) rather than publishing as it could be. Which, in turn, means that whilst someone (like me) who fits that demographic might feel instantly at home in the RNA, someone who falls outside the demographic might not.

As part of our ongoing endeavours to make everyone feel welcome, we’ve changed the venues for our events to make them more accessible to writers with mobility difficulties, we’ve updated our publicity materials to display a (slightly) wider diversity of race and gender, we offer gender-neutral toilets, we’ve created our Rainbow Chapter for LGBTQIA+ members, and we continually revisit our criteria for both membership and entry to our awards to ensure that we include as wide a range of writers and books as possible.

We’ve also embarked on an expansion of the bursaries the RNA has always offered to members in financial need. Over the last couple of years, enabled by the overwhelming generosity of many of our members, we’ve extended them from simple bursaries into grants which offer membership, not only to writers who can’t otherwise afford the membership fee, but to writers from under-represented groups.

This reflects the RNA’s awareness that lack of income isn’t the only barrier that writers meet, and that as an organisation, we need to do what we can to decrease those barriers, or to at least help writers surmount them. Our endeavours to improve the RNA’s inclusivity and diversity are, like so many things in a writer’s life, a work in progress. We’re always open to suggestions (send here, please! imogenhowson@romanticnovelistsassociation.org). And with work, determination, and a willingness to listen and get better, every day we move the RNA closer to being the place where all writers find their people.

 

Imogen is the Vice-Chair of the Romantic Novelists’ Association. She writes fantasy and science fiction for young adults, and is the winner of the young adult category of the Romantic Novel of the Year Award 2014, and of the Elizabeth Goudge Award in 2008 and 2017.

New FOREO Product The ISSA 2

There are toothbrushes and then they are toothbrushes. FOREO are one of my favourite brands, their innovative products always work and their new toothbrush is the latter, a toothbrush that blows all of the others out of the water. It is an electric toothbrush that you only need to charge once a year, that only needs its head replaced once a year, and it is the world’s first silicone sonic toothbrush. It has 16 speeds for customised cleaning and bacteria-resistant silicone design. The sonic pulsations give effective cleaning. It also looks great. It costs £149 and the heads are £17 but you only need to buy one a year. It comes in four gorgeous colours.

I love the fact its head only needs replaced once a year, making it environmentally friendly. Buy it now.

Dare to do more with the improved ISSA 2. By blending durable PBT polymer and ultra-soft silicone into one remarkable sonic toothbrush that now lasts for 365 days on a single charge, ISSA 2 can keep you smiling without a second’s pause. The improved electric toothbrush with dynamic dual-design

The bar for advanced oral care has been raised once again. ISSA 2 features a sleek, waterproof design that sets it apart from the rest. With improved sonic pulse technology, a combination brush head and a new 365 day charge, you’ll get way more mileage for your smile than ever before.

Available from http://foreo.com/, feelunique.com, amazon and harrods.com

The Zookeeper’s Daughter by Oliver Eade and Lara Isabelle Ruiz Eade: reviewed by Annie Clarke

The Zookeeper’s Daughter is such a good book, but how did it come about?
Oliver Eade, award winning Young Adult author explains: ‘Written during the lockdown in collaboration with our 9-year-old Swiss granddaughter, this novel  is about a brave little girl who is determined to save endangered animals from being rendered extinct as a result of what humans are doing to the planet. Lara drew the short straw and had to do the illustrations. We dedicated the book to Sir David Attenborough, my life-long hero, and he wrote Lara a lovely thank you letter at 94!’
Frost Magazine was delighted to review this novel, for that’s what it is, rather than an indigestible polemic and Lara is to be congratulated on the illustrations. The Zookeeper’s Daughter explores  the world of endangered species using magic to transport Isabelle  into the body and environment of whatever animal is featured in each chapter. In this we we ‘see’  her experiences of their imagined life, and highlight the inherent danger.
At the same time it also explores Isabelle’s relationship with her younger brother, Joe,  Grumpy Gramps, and her friend. Relationships which grow stronger as their understanding of the Lara’s concerns come home to roost.
But let Oliver Eade tell us a bit more:
In December 2019, my wife and I were enjoying Christmas with our Swiss granddaughters in the Alpine village of Leysin. The younger girl, Lara Isabelle, informed me that she wanted to illustrate one of my children’s books as her elder sister, Olivia, had done two years back. The challenge was set. I was still struggling with my latest young adult novel, The Fire Hills, and welcomed a return to writing for a younger age group. Knowing nothing about the dark menace of Covid-19 coronavirus that had already crossed over from a wild animal to the people of Wuhan in China, our granddaughters’ love of animals came to mind as I wracked my brain for a story to tell. Lara and I sat together and discussed my idea: a half-Swiss, half-Scottish daughter of a zookeeper, fed up with her annoying little brother, is devastated to learn she will not be visiting her Swiss ‘mamie’ (granny) that summer. Her wish to escape the boredom of spending summer with little Joe and their grumpy Scottish grandfather, and to be free like all those lucky wild animals, comes true when a magical spider emerges from a cuddly white chamois her grandmother gave her, and weaves a golden web that can transport her into the worlds of wild animals in a very special book from an old zoo employee who is ill in hospital. Soon after I began writing Lara’s book, the threat of a serious pandemic changed from just another news item to a dreaded reality that now dominates all our lives. I completed the first draft during the early stages of lockdown two months later. Never had I finished a novel within such a short space of time …’
Courtesy of Isabelle
The review team enjoyed The Zookeeper’s Daughter enormously, in part because of the vibrancy of the illustrations (bravo Lara) and of course, because of the certain hand of Oliver Eade guiding and crafting  the structure, and scenes, not to mention his experience as a skilled writer.
So often these novels become worthy and bang on relentlessly about the particular cause they are highlighting, but The Zookeper’s Daughter is multi faceted, cleverly imagined, thought provoking and – so importantly – great fun.
Bravo both of you. A triumph. Vibrant and enchanting.
The Zookeeper’s Daughter by Oliver Eade and Lara Isabelle Ruiz Eade is available at Amazon.co.uk in eBook or pb.
Annie Clarke is the author of the Home Front Girls series. 

SISTER SCRIBES: JANE CABLE ON TAKING THE SOFTWARE OPTION

Plotter or notter? Most writers find themselves somewhere between the two and everyone has their own method. Some are wedded to post-its and pinboards; others long pages of notes. Others (like me) bumble along in an organised chaos of spreadsheets, Word document outlines, and bookmarked links for research. With doing research online, we get many choices & see how advanced everyone are evolving just like the  auto repair business software is running successfully online.

I always promised myself that one day, all that muddle would change. Next time I started a new project it would be different. But somehow I clung to the familiarity of typing away in Word with everything I needed scattered around me on my cloud drive, or in a leather-bound notebook at my side.

So – new book, new broom. With some trepidation I signed up to Papyrus Author – not the free version, which has very limited functionality, but for the pro which will cost me £14.99 a month. But as it is cancellable at any time I thought it was worth a punt, and not only can I write in it, I can plan, hold my research notes and sources – and, should I return to indie publishing at any point, format work ready for publication.

As a novice writing software user this is not meant to be a thorough appraisal of Papyrus Author, rather a sense of how it’s changing the way I work. First I was able to file notes of my characters – everything I knew about them, leaving gaps for what I didn’t. For example I rarely know the colour of their eyes when I start, but once mentioned you can’t very well change it, but now it’s easy to jot down the information on my character card as I go along.

It’s the same for places. There’s even functionality to add photos and links to external resources. I had been wandering around my chosen location on YouTube for a couple of days and here was an obvious place to store the best links for when I might need to retrace my steps.

Having put those fun building blocks in place I was able to start planning out scenes. Yes, planning. One scene at a time, not just a vague roadmap. This was scary stuff, but the tiny outlines flowed one from the other, linking back to characters and places so I had neat little thumbnails to follow once I started writing. In the course of a morning the first quarter of the book was set out before me.

So – to write. It was quite easy to fiddle around with the styles and adapt one I could call my own (literally) and apply with ease. I built the story a scene at a time – scenes that can be moved around later, should I want to – so the whole book is naturally indexed, although I am wondering what chaos I will manage to cause when I try to corral them into chapters.

But best of all for me is the is a distraction free mode to write in. Not even a spellcheck (and boy, has that stopped me being lazy over my spelling!). Words tumble onto the page. Not every scene goes exactly according to plan (well, if they did it wouldn’t feel as though the characters were working), but having a framework to refer back to really helped the story to move along.

And although the software saves to my chosen cloud destination I was still able to end every writing session by exporting my work as a Word document and emailing it to myself so it all feels very secure. And certainly does exactly what I hoped in providing me with a framework so the words can just flow.

Endless Skies by award winning author Jane Cable: reviewed by Annie Clarke

A fabulously crafted novel from award winning author, Jane Cable, who seamlessly merges the 2nd World War with present day. Not easy, but Cable makes it seem so.

So, let’s meet Rachel Ward, Cable’s main character, who is as flawed as many of us, though perhaps some of us avoid her particular failing which is falling repeatedly for a wrong ‘un. Oh yes she does, and is yet again having to extricate herself from a dead end affair, this time with her married boss.

Unsurprisingly she is forced to leave her long term posting in Southampton, and the love affair,  and head for a temporary role as an Archaeology Lecturer at Lincoln University.

But does a change of scene make any difference? Will she still run full pelt towards disaster when a male student makes it clear he is attracted to her, or will she sort herself out, once and for all, and stop all this self induced pain. But in order to find some balance in her life, and in her emotions, does she need to reflect on why she repeats this self-destructive behaviour? If so, how can she brings this journey of self discovery about?

 In an effort to prevent herself heading for the immediate danger she distracts herself with extra work – for Jonathan Daubney, a property developer.

It is through Jonathan that she visits a 2nd World War RAF base, a base that gives off a disturbing atmosphere. But why?

Well, she wanted a distraction, and it seems she has that in spades as she delves into the local history of life at the RAF station during that painful period.

As well as meeting new friends, she finds a world that might well lead her towards a greater understanding of herself, and towards a happier future. Echoes … echoes …

With a father who was a Battle of Britain pilot I know something about the world Rachel reveals (or Jane Cable I should say) and let me tell you, it’s pretty damned accurate. 

A delicate, thought provoking heartfelt exploration of balance, emotional patterns and love.  Bravo Jane Cable, a triumph, but this is nothing less that I would expect from this outstanding author.

 

Endless Skies by award winning author Jane Cable  availabe in pb and eBook

Annie Clarke is the author of the Girls on the Home Front series, and also writes as Margaret Graham and Milly Adams.