Tag Archives: Relationships

Heart-Shaped Bruise by Tanya Byrne

 

Publisher: Headline

ISBN: 978-0755393039

Publication date: 10th May 2012 (hardback)

Of all of the books that I’ve been sent from We Love This Book for review, this is the one that I was most excited about. There had been rumblings on Twitter for a few months before I received it, about a new Y.A./crossover novel which was making people sit up and take notice, and it sounded really interesting. This is it!

Set in the psychiatric ward of young offenders institute, Tanya Byrne’s début, Heart-Shaped Bruise, is a gritty and fascinating look at the need for revenge and redemption, and whether retribution can ever really be worth the sacrifice.

Emily Koll is a 17 year old inmate. The narrative is told through her diary entries, which she then leaves in her room for the next inmate to find. Emily’s diary notes that her case has been in the press for months, with the tabloids jumping on a violent crime committed by a pretty teenager. As we’re not actually privy to these headlines, Emily’s crime remains a mystery until the last few pages. Byrne shows great restraint here, as it would have been easy to make the whole novel about Emily’s violent act. Instead, we get a finely wrought story about a teenager’s fight to come to terms with her history, and her equally fraught battles with her therapist.

Although Emily isn’t necessarily be a likeable character, she is certainly sympathetic, especially when trying to avoid Dr Gilyard’s probing questions about her past.  She’s cynical, ballsy and manipulative, but also sensitive. She’s basically a normal teenager, albeit one with a hidden agenda. She’s also unexpectedly funny, with a black humour that made you chuckle and then immediately look around to see if anyone saw me inappropriately giggling.

Byrne’s writing is both lyrical and gritty, much like Emily herself, and the novel is compulsively readable. I read it in one go, gobbling down the pages, eager to get to the end and find out what had happened, but also scared in case it was an anti-climax. To my great relief, it wasn’t. I’d tried to avoid speculating what was going to happen, and what Emily’s crime actually was, but I wouldn’t have guessed. It is beautifully handled – although the revelation is shocking, it is not sensationalist, which makes it even more affecting.

I was nervous that Byrne would not be able to resist giving Emily a traditional happy ending but she did, and I was so thankful. To have Emily skip off into the sunset would have been both insulting to the reader and the story, as well as unrealistic. I don’t think that I’m ruining the book to say this, as I think that anyone who starts reading the novel will see that Byrne is too honest a writer to take the easy way out.

Heart-Shaped Bruise totally lived up to the hype, and is a fantastic read. Emily is a believable character and, despite her crime, I found myself rooting for her to be able to put it behind her. I’m still thinking about the book, and I finished it a month ago, which I think speaks volumes about the writing. I really can’t wait to see what Byrne comes up with next, so hopefully she won’t keep us waiting too long!

It is published on the 10th May 2012 as an adult title.

4.5/5

This book was provided for review by http://www.welovethisbook.com all views are my own and I was not paid for the review.


The Other Child – Charlotte Link

Best-selling German author Charlotte Link is back with another tense thriller, this time translated into English. Set in Scarborough, The Other Child is a crime novel that explores the impact of past sins coming to light in the present day.

This is the first of Link’s novels that I’ve read, and I was quite impressed. From the opening chapter, in which a scared young woman makes a gruesome discovery in a barn, it is clear that Link is highly skilled in creating atmosphere within her novels. This mysterious incident is then not mentioned again until well into the story, with the attention focusing instead on the vicious, and seemingly motiveless, murder of a student on her way home from babysitting one night. The police, led by D.I. Valerie Almond, are stumped until another, similar, murder is committed nearby.

The main protagonists are part of a cleverly-connected web, at the heart of which are Fiona and Chad, elderly friends who have known each other since childhood. When emails that Fiona has written to Chad about events in their past come to light, there are suddenly strong possible motives for the murder. These emails are shown to the reader, but in small sections at a time, allowing the tension to build steadily. I read it with a lengthening list of questions, always a good sign in a thriller: are the murders linked to Fiona’s evacuation from London during the 2nd World War? What lurks behind that barn door? What part do the slightly creepy paying guests at the farm play?

The other characters are a bit of a mixed bag. Colin and Jennifer Brankley, the paying guests who have been staying at the farm for years, have their own backstory, which is somewhat tenuously connected to one of the victims, and are suitably creepy at times. Chad’s daughter, Gwen, is a quiet mouse whose relationship with a smooth talking underachiever is a source of scepticism for everyone, who think that he is only with her for the farm. Leslie, Fiona’s grand-daughter, is a doctor in London but escapes to Scarborough, back to the grandmother who brought her up. This time she is running away from a failed marriage, but doesn’t find the refuge that she was searching for, as Fiona clearly has problems of her own.

Link writes compellingly and is very readable. I would have liked some more of Valerie Almond, who promised to be an interesting character but who is not given much ‘screen time’, which is a shame. Some of the links between the crimes are a little unlikely, but overall it is tightly plotted, and the ending is nicely paced. The Other Child is a good, solid thriller which, whilst not a book to keep you reading into the small hours, is perfect for a holiday.

3/5

This book was provided for review purposes by www.welovethisbook.com.


Every Vow You Break – Julia Crouch

Following the success of Cuckoo, Julia Crouch has written another psychological thriller that is sure to be equally well-received. Crouch is one of those writers who have the kind of writing style which make her books recognisable without them being ‘samey’, much in the same way as Sophie Hannah, a writer whose work I love (and must review at some point!).

When the Wayland family decamp to upstate New York for the summer to allow Marcus to perform in a community production of Macbeth, Lara and her kids – Olly, Bella and Jack – don’t know what to expect. What they get is a dirty and dusty house in a tiny town, with only a library and a pool for excitement, excepting the theatre, which is much smaller than they were led to believe. They are met by theatre company’s director, James and his wife Betty, who have arranged a surprise for the family, one which Lara in particular isn’t expecting. Stephen Molloy, one of Marcus’ old friends, now a Hollywood star, is in the area, recovering from a breakdown caused by a stalker in LA. He and Lara were also once in love, having an affair not long after Lara’s marriage to Marcus. The meeting at James and Betty’s reawakens feelings which Lara thought that she had hidden away forever, and throws her attempts at rekindling her marriage into total disarray. Soon Stephen and Lara are getting increasingly close again, but Lara is playing with fire and doesn’t seem to realise that she could get burnt…

In addition to Lara and Stephen’s story, there is a subplot involving Lara and Marcus’ eldest children, Bella and Olly. They are 16 year old twins who, at first, seem to have normal teenaged-sibling relationship, bickering and teasing. However, it is soon implied that there is more to it than that. Bella is obviously scared of Olly, and he frequently threatens her with something. When you find out what that something is, the book takes a more sinister turn.

There is a real sense of impending danger swirling around the novel. From the strange woman who seems to be following Lara, trying to run her over and making gestures, and the louts that Olly finds to hang out with, to the discoveries that Lara makes within the house, no chapter goes by without Crouch ratcheting up the tension, which goes some way to explain the slow pace of the first half of the novel.

Crouch has a skill for writing about place. In Cuckoo this was shown in the vivid descriptions of the West Country countryside, and in this novel it is the evocation of the hot New York summer. The filthy rental house, dusty deserted streets and the close, overheated atmosphere of the small town are well-matched to the slowly building tension and the boredom of  seemingly endless days, and  Stephen’s mansion in the woods offers a refuge from both the grimy heat and her failing relationship for Lara.

Once again, Crouch has written a well-crafted and tense novel. I felt that Bella and Olly’s subplot was a little forced, but it tied in well with the overall narrative at the end. My main criticism is one that I also had about Cuckoo, and that is the denouement feels rushed. Crouch builds the tension and the atmosphere so well throughout the majority of the novel that the ending feels a little anti-climactic, especially the epilogue. I enjoyed this more than Cuckoo, and only the slightly abrupt ending, and irritating epilogue, stops it being a 4 out of 5.
 
 
3.5/5
 
 
This book was provided for review purposes by http://www.welovethisbook.com.

Tideline by Penny Hancock

I finished Penny Hancock’s debut novel on Sunday, having received it on Wednesday. My review pile is growing and I thought that Tideline would join the other books waiting for some attention. However, I couldn’t stop thinking about it. Maybe it was the premise, maybe it was the promise of the Thames featuring as almost a character in itself, but Hancock’s novel was never going to last long on that review pile! So, without any review deadlines coming up, I’d bump it up the list and read it over the weekend.

Sonia lives in the River House, in Greenwich. Her father left her the house when he committed suicide years before, and her mother now lives in an assisted-living flat. Sonia’s husband Greg is a doctor who is frequently travelling and their only child, Kit, has just left home to go to Newcastle University, leaving Sonia alone in the house that she loves. She is becoming increasingly insular, cutting herself off from her friends, including Helen, and then she meets Jez, Helen’s fifteen year old nephew. He has come around to borrow a record from her husband Greg, but Sonia knows that she cannot allow him to leave. Inviting him in, she plies him with wine and cooks dinner for the two of them, letting Jez play Greg’s guitar and having, in her eyes, a lovely grown-up conversation. She also calls him ‘Seb’ occasionally which confuses him, although she laughs it off. When Jez is too drunk to get home, she puts him to bed in their music room, promising that he shouldn’t worry about it, that it happens to everyone occasionally.

What doesn’t happen to everyone is waking up to a raging hangover and finding yourself locked in the spare room of your host’s house. Sonia makes an excuse for locking the door whenever she leaves Jez in the music room, and he seems to believe her at first. However it isn’t long before she needs to sedate him with sleeping pills that she has taken from her mother in order to make him stay with her. When Greg and Kit announce that they are coming home for the weekend, she must make a decision- will she let him go, pretending that it was all part of an elaborate plan for his birthday surprise, or will she move him somewhere else?

Alternated with these sections focussing on Sonia are chapters which show the fallout from Jez’s disappearance, and how it affects his family and girlfriend. The key character in these sections is Helen, Sonia’s old friend and Jez’s aunt. He was staying with her and her family whilst he auditioned for music colleges. colleges which her less diligent sons would never get into. When he doesn’t come home, his mother flies to England and the tension in Helen’s household rises considerably. She resents her sister’s accusatory tone in reference to both her methods of child-rearing and Jez’s disappearance, but the accusations don’t only come from within her home. The police seem convinced that Helen knows more than she is letting on about her nephew’s whereabouts, and her increasingly noticeable drinking isn’t helping her cause.

Hancock throws you straight into the plot with very little build-up, and it thus feels very immediate. Sonia’s chapters are told in the present tense first-person, which really works when the narrative is based so greatly on her state of mind and her thought-processes. Strewn throughout her narrative about Jez are flashbacks to her relationship with Seb, her first and only real love, at least until Jez appeared at her door. The memories are dangerous and disturbing, both to Sonia and to the reader, telling of a relationship based on domination and hero-worship. It is clear that Seb had some horrible accident, but the details are only released slowly and teasingly as Sonia remembers things that she has kept hidden for thirty years.

I did feel as if there could have been a little more explanation as to why Jez didn’t fight to escape more as he became scared, but his reactions were just about believable as they were. In addition, Sonia feels more fleshed-out than Helen - the descriptions of her deteriorating mental state are stark and unsettling, and the gradual revelations about her and Seb are satisfying. On the other hand, Helen’s character feels slightly more two-dimensional, possibly because her narrative is in the third person. However, one aspect of her character that I did find interesting and believable was her having mixed feelings towards Jez. She resents her nephew, even when he vanishes, but she is honest enough with herself to realise that, whatever her feelings towards her sister, none of what has happened is Jez’s fault. Her sons are responsible for their own lives and it is fair on no-one to compare them to Jez.

It feels strange to be describing a book with such a dark subject matter as Tideline as enjoyable, but I really did find it a joy to read. It was uncomfortable in places, especially when Sonia describes stroking the sleeping Jez, but it is never gratuitous and is sensitively written. The way in which the Thames is used to build atmosphere, in all of its dark and dangerous glory, is wonderful and really helps to build the tension. Sonia’ s fixation with the river, and the events that occurred on it, is a constant throughout the novel, one that reflects  her swirling and increasingly confused thoughts. The ending, with its shocking revelation about Seb and Sonia, was a genuine surprise, and one which I haven’t been able to stop thinking about in the days since I finished the book.

It’s a thrilling début and I can’t wait to see what Hancock writes next.

4/5

This book was provided as a review copy, but I was not paid for my review, and the views expressed are mine.


Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn

I’ve been wondering how to write this review since I started Gone Girl. Gillian Flynn has written a book which is almost impossible to review without giving away major plot points. Just as you think that you have a handle on what’s going on, and who is in the right, another twist comes along and throws everything into disarray again. It’s about the complexity of relationships, and the need for revenge that springs from the hatred caused by a failed marriage. Flynn is a highly intelligent writer, and I’m so envious of her for conceiving this plot!

Without giving anything away, the premise is this. Nick Dunne met Amy Elliott at a party in New York. They were both writers, working for successful magazines, and they hit it off straight away….for an evening. 8 months later, they meet again and this time get married. They are the perfect couple: cool, clever, wealthy and in love. Amy’s parents are the authors of the ‘Amazing Amy’ series of books for children, based on their own daughter, and although Amy is used to being admired, she’s also sick of being bettered by her semi-fictional counterpart. With Nick, she is finally on top.

The novel opens with Nick going downstairs on the morning of their 5th wedding anniversary to find Amy making pancakes for him. Told in the first person, Nick’s narrative makes it clear that he is uneasy about his anniversary, and uncomfortable, but before we are told why, the chapter ends and the narrative switches to Amy’s diary entry for the night she met Nick for the first time: “Tra and la! I am smiling a big adopted orphan smile as I write this”. Something must have gone seriously wrong between the two of them to go from Amy’s ecstatically happy entry to Nick’s uncomfortable avoidance of his wife, but Flynn doesn’t let you know what it is immediately. She teases and tantalises, the narrative alternating between Nick’s present-day narrative and Amy’s diary entries.

By the end of the third chapter, Amy is gone, vanished. Her dress is still on the ironing board, ready to be pressed for their anniversary treasure-hunt, an Elliott, and now Dunne, tradition. It is at this point that the book becomes hard to write about, because almost every chapter contains a twist or a turn, the story snaking around and around until it’s hard to see who is right, or wrong, or where the narrative is going. That isn’t to say that it’s overly complicated or confusing; rather that, to use an over-used phrase, it’s a real page-turner. The story keeps on moving and it’s a hard book to put down, which surprised me because if I came across characters this unbearable in any other book, I’d have probably had to force myself to finish it. Nick and Amy both made me want to throw the book through the window at regular intervals, but they worked in the context of the narrative. Nick’s sister, Margot, is more likeable – she’s funny, intelligent and neurotic. She’s the kind of woman who would probably be described as ‘feisty’, but in a good way. The two laywers, Tanner and Betsy Bolt, add a nice touch of humour with their pretty double act and antics with jelly beans.

If I had a criticism of Gone Girl, it would be that the ending, whilst not an anti-climax, only just works. Flynn makes her protagonists’ actions convincing and in character, but it’s one step away from being ridiculous. That having been said, the whole book is faintly melodramatic so the ending isn’t a big change of tone. I just feel as if Flynn could have taken a different direction with it, and it would have been a little more convincing.

All in all, this is the first thriller in a long time that I’ve had such a hard time putting down. I hated the two main characters and thought that the twists and turns were exhausting but these things worked, in  perverse way, to make the novel ultra-readable. I’ll definitely look out for the two previous novels by Flynn, Dark Places and Sharp Objects.

4/5

Published on the 24th May in the UK.

I won an advance proof copy of this novel. The views are all my own and I wasn’t paid for the review.


Rocks in the Belly – Jon Bauer

Rocks in the Belly is a dark and unsettling debut novel from Jon Bauer.

A story of grief, jealousy and redemption, it is narrated by the same character at two different ages, eight and twenty eight. We never learn his name, but as an adult he goes by Michael, the name of his younger brother who died when he was only a day old. The boy was the only biological child of a couple who a long line of boys whom the boy greatly resented, although none as much as Robert who arrived when the boy was eight years old. Robert quickly became close to his foster mother who, in turn, seemed to her young son to value her new foster child far more than him. Robert was a little older and this age difference means that he gets privileges that add to the feelings of disparity and injustice that are building within the boy, until they come to a climax one sunny afternoon…

Twenty years later the boy returns home a man, to take care of his mother who is suffering from a brain tumour. He struggles with both guilt and frustration as he attempts to communicate with the woman who he feels failed him as a child, but whose love he always craved. She is locked in her mind apart from rare moments of lucidity. One of these comes when her son admits something that she had always suspected, and in that small moment, there is a feeling of redemption for the tortured soul of the small boy who is still trapped within the grown man.

Bauer writes fluently and the novel is compelling despite its bleakness. I can say honestly that it is hard reading- there are some moments of animal torture, and some of the passages detailing how the man treats his ill mother are particularly difficult to get through. However, the portions narrated by the young boy are mostly convincing and, although none of the characters are in any way likeable, it is a well-told tale of a family who never understood each other until it was too late.  I’m glad that I finished it (I almost gave up half-way through as I was so depressed by it), but I never wish to read it again.

2.5/5

This book was provided for review purposes by www.welovethisbook.com.


Valentine’s gifts for book lovers

Valentine’s Day is just around the corner but there’s still time to drop some hints about lovely book-themed gifts, or treat someone special (that person can definitely be yourself!)

This origami card is lovely, with a heart folded from an old Turkish text and a sweet message which looks like it’s been typed on an old typewriter. Romance and punnery, perfect for book and type geeks alike, from one of my favourite sites for literary loveliness, Bookish.

£3.00 here

I love Scrabble and this ‘upcycled’ Scrabble brooch is fabulous. Simple and striking, it also comes in ‘geek’ and ‘riot’ for the less sappy amongst you.

£8.00 here

If you don’t want to give just a card, why not give a booklet of poetry instead? This adorable little package includes poems about tea by poets such as Carol Ann Duffy, Thomas Hardy and Jo Shapcott, and a matching bookmark.  Lots of variations are available including poems on love, mothers, cats and, rather brilliantly, puddings. From old favourite, The Literary Gift Company.

£4.95 here

Love poems here

The Literary Gift Company have also just brought out three mugs like this, each with a romantic scene from a different literary classic. I’ve chosen the one featuring the first kiss between Beatrice and Benedict in Much Ado About Nothing, my favourite Shakespeare play. I love how each mug only shows a tiny bit of the scene, which made me immediately go and look it up to remind myself!

£9.95 here

I’ve been thinking a lot about how I feel about these roses. That they’re gorgeous and special (and pricey) is not in doubt, but I’ve always been adamant about not buying anything that was made by harming a book. However, these seem to be made from well-loved but falling-apart romantic novels so I’m just about reconciled to them…oh, who am I kidding, they’re beautiful!

Available as a bouquet for £75.00 here or as a single rose for £8.00.


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