Posted in Monthly Wrap Up, Reviews

April reads and my thoughts on the cast of the Thursday Murder Club film

April has been a quick month, which is such a relief when I think about how the previous months have dragged by.

Aside from working and reading, I’ve been spending a lot of time playing Animal Crossing New Horizons. I’ve had it since 2020 and played it off and on since then, and I’ve finally made it to 4 stars.

In my spare time I’ve been working my way through my Philippa Gregory backlist, with The Lady Of The Rivers and The White Queen. I’ve enjoyed both of these, and am loving learning more about the Wars of the Roses, even if it is highly fictionalised.


Currently reading:

There’s an unintentional them here…


Finished reads:

Doing Time by Jodi Taylor

Last Girl Breathing by Court Stevens – a Netgalley arc which had me guessing all the way to the end.

The Lady of Rivers by Philipa Gregory- I loved The Other Boleyn Girl when I read it a couple of years ago as part of a buddy read, so I bought some more books by the author. Then abandoned them on my shelf until now.

All this talk of a new series of Wolf Hall has put me in the mood for more royal court drama, and being introduced to a new historical figure in Jaquetta has fanned the flames of my obsession with this time period.

The book itself is packed with plenty of detail and action, and Jaquetta herself is a strong, determined woman who knows how to play her cards in order to fit in at the English court.


New buys


Netgalley approvals:

As if my TBR pile isn’t towering enough, I discovered that Netgalley has an “available now” section and proceeded to request a lot of books.


TBR tackle progress – hosted by Books Are 42.

Completed:

  • Royalty – The Lady Of The Rivers
  • Young Adult – Last Girl Breathing
  • Female author
  • Starts with C or P
  • Time jump
  • Red on the cover
  • Gold on the cover
  • First book in a series

Still to finish:

  • Plants on the cover
  • Fantasy
  • Book by a Black Author
  • Novella
  • Starts with A or T
  • STEM themes
  • Fairytale or folklore inspired
  • Green on the cover
  • Starts with G or N
  • Borrowed book
  • Yellow on the cover

We finally got a Thursday Murder Club cast!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Adaptations tend to make book lovers anxious because our favourite characters are forever going to be associated with the actor’s performance of them, while the script will be 100% true to the source material or wildly dramatic and nothing like our beloved stories.

April brought me some of this panic when Richard Osman teased an upcoming announcement of the cast of the Thursday Murder Club adaptation, before finally dropping some names towards the end of the month.

Thankfully, I can say I am both relieved and impatiently waiting for the film to be made and ready to watch, as the cast so far is pretty spot on to what I had been hoping for and the speculation I’ve read online.

My absolute favourite casting decision is none other than Helen Mirren for Elizabeth. The legend herself suits this role in a way I can’t describe, and I’m so happy she has been given it.

For the parts of Ibrahim and Ron, I had nobody specific in mind, so the roles going to Ben Kinglsey and Pierce Brosnan didn’t cause much of a reaction either way.

Ben Kingsley’s name had come up a few times during my deep dive into who the internet would cast, and although I haven’t see much of his work, I think he will be good in the role of Ibrahim.

I have to admit to not expecting Pierce Brosnan for Ron, but I’m trying to reserve judgement because for all I know, he could be perfect in the part.


Posted in Reviews

Doing Time by Jodi Taylor


Synopsis

At some time in the future, the secret of time-travel became available to all. Chaos ensued as people sought to take advantage. Because there will always be nutters who want to change history…

And so the Time Police were formed. Internationally sanctioned thugs whose task it was to keep the timeline straight by any and all means possible. And they succeeded. The Time Wars are over. The Time Police won. But who will win the peace?

Doing Time follows three hapless new Time Police recruits – Jane, Luke and Matthew – as they try to navigate their first year on the beat. It’s all going to be fine. Obviously.


My thoughts

I loved this book. It was silly, it was fun, and it had time travel.

There were shenanigans, a brief appearance from Julius Caesar, and a visit to the pyramids, all the while Jane, Luke and Matthew are wondering whether being in the Time Police is the right place for them given that their new colleagues refer to them as Team Weird and make life uncomfortable for them as every available opportunity.

I was so happy to learn that this is just one book in a series set in this universe, and I will be squirrelled away with the rest of the books just as soon as I can get my hands on them.

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Posted in Reviews

Just another missing person by Gillian McAllister


Synopsis

22-year-old Olivia has been missing for one day…and counting. She was last seen on CCTV, entering a dead-end alley. And not coming back out again.

Julia, the detective heading up the search for Olivia, thinks she knows what to expect. A desperate family, a ticking clock, and long hours away from her husband and daughter. But she has no idea just how close to home this case is going to get.

Because the criminal at the heart of the disappearance has something she never expected. His weapon isn’t a gun, or a knife: it’s a secret. Her worst one. And her family’s safety depends on one thing: Julia must NOT find out what happened to Olivia – and must frame somebody else for her murder.

If you find her, you will lose everything. What would you do?


My Thoughts

After reading Wrong Place Wrong Time last year I wanted to read more books by Gillian McAllister, so I preordered Just Another Missing Person after it was announced.

The premise sounded interesting. A girl goes into a dead-end alley and doesn’t come back out. Of course I wanted answers.

Without giving anything away, all I will say is that I was kept guessing and there were plenty of clues which in hindsight were satisfyingly obvious. And that twist was genius.

As with McAllister’s other stories, family was an important theme. It made the characters act in ways they wouldn’t normally, and for Julia the lead detective, meant she was vulnerable to blackmail and she was willing to do anything to protect her family in spite of how important her job as a police officer was to her.

This huge moral dilemma was really well done. Julia’s fear and determination were so genuine, I really was hoping she would manage to find out what happened to Olivia while also managing to keep her own secret from being uncovered.

Rating: 4 out of 5.