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The Midnight Bookshop by Amanda James

An Imagination’s Delight

The Midnight Bookshop by Amanda James is the most delightful novel that will fire up your imagination.

This is a tale about three people and their new-found love of reading. “It doesn’t matter how much you read… as long as you attempt it.” Books are the doorway to brave new worlds. They offer possibilities and show you a new way of living. The Midnight Bookshop “is built on the imagination, mystery and magic.” As the reader sinks between its’ pages, we ‘feel’ the power of the story.

The leading three characters are all floundering. Life has not been kind to any of them. They all face different challenges.

A twenty-one-year-old has everything that money can buy but money cannot buy love. “I didn’t want their money… I wanted their love.” Everyone desires to be loved.

In contrast an eighteen-year-old is living in poverty and declares, “I feel trapped.” Caught between an ailing mother and a drug dealing older brother, his life is going nowhere and he cannot see a way out.

And finally, we have a young woman who has been trapped in an abusive marriage for ten years. “He wanted her to feel unattractive, worthless… a woman with no confidence is easier to control.” Day upon day, her husband has put her down, either with his words or with his fists. “She felt she was a non-person.” She feels invisible.

A flyer for the Midnight Bookshop brings the three to its’ doors. Each one finally finds a place of refuge from the world. “It’s as if she’s come home. A sense of belonging.”

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The Dolce Vita Divas by Maddie Please

The Ghosts Of The Past

The Dolce Vita Divas by Maddie Please is a most delightful contemporary novel that I read in just one sitting.

Maddie Please has created a wonderful, light-hearted read about second chances and really living life whatever your age.

All the characters are over sixty. They prove that age is no barrier to having fun. “I used to think life had passed me by and then I realized it hadn’t… Take every chance you get.” We need to grab life with both hands. We are never too old to re-write our story and to have a good ending – even an eighty-five-year-old knows how to live life. After all age is just a number.

The action is in the first person from the lead characters point of view. We get to know her intimately. Her life has been full, raising children but her first love has never left her heart. After her husband of many years left her (before the book opened), she realizes that now is the time to make some life changes.

A holiday in Capri with a friend, and in memory of another friend, offers new possibilities.

The landscape is in glorious technicolour compared with grey England. The reader can ‘feel’ the warmth and ‘see’ the vibrant colours.

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The House At River’s Edge by Rachel Burton

One Last Beautiful Summer

The House At River’s Edge by Rachel Burton is a powerful dual timeline that I just could not put down. I read it in just two sittings, pausing only to sleep!

The two time periods are 1914-1919, and 1997. The chapters alternate as we follow a family through the first World War years, and again after a long-lost photograph is found. Along with the characters, we have questions about the ancestors of a family. All is not as we first thought.

The summer of 1919 was the final summer of freedom. “I hold on to the memories of that summer.” With the advent of war, lives would be changed forever. A generation of young men left enthusiastically for war. Many never returned. Those who did, had often left their minds on the battlefields. “When I sleep, I’m back there, in the trenches.” We see the devastating effects of shell shock. “They can talk about peace and armistice as much as they like; he knows he will never find peace again.” People often suffered from shell shock for the rest of their lives.

We witness the heartbreaking results when a loved one dies. “Death doesn’t care about those who are left behind.” Characters know they will never love again like they did, making decisions to support each other.

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He Should Have Told The Bees by Amanda Cox

So Beautiful

He Should Have Told The Bees by Amanda Cox is an absolutely superb Christian novel that I absolutely adored.

This is a powerful read about life, love, loss and family. We learn that no one has a perfect life. We are all living lives, with private battles that no one knows about.

Sometimes what we believe about the lives of others is simply not true. We see what they choose to show us. Likewise, we are not responsible for the failings in others. “The lie still lives on inside me – the belief that my mother loved alcohol more than me… My mother has a substance disorder… It wasn’t the result of anything I did or didn’t do.” Alcohol abuse needs help and understanding in order to recover from. Often the root cause lies deep within.

We witness a character who has spent a lifetime trying to ‘fix’ her mother. “You couldn’t be the one to fill the holes in another person’s life… let[ting] God heal the wounds.” God is the Great Physician who will heal us if we just let Him in.

A character has known God but has wandered away. We witness a returning to the Father. “God help me to know what to do next… I don’t want to be motivated by my fear of all things that could go wrong. Teach me how to rely on you.” When we have faith, we do not need to fear, for God has got us and will hold us up.

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