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Tag: Women’s Prize for Fiction Winners

Book Review: On Beauty by Zadie Smith

April 7, 2017June 19, 20191 Comment

A great character study but for such a long book I was looking for more of a story. Well written and enjoyable but too lengthy and a little lacking. It's 3 stars for "On Beauty."

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My Top Posts

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  • Book Review: One? by Jennifer L. Cahill
  • Blog Tour: In The Company of Strangers by Awais Khan
  • Blog Tour: The Perfect Moment by Alix Kelso
  • Blog Tour: I Can't Tell You Why by Elaine Robertson North
  • Book Review: The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky

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This week I've been reading #LastNight by @mhairimcf as part of the @tandemcollectiveuk readalong 💛
It's my stop on the blog tour for book three in the Rampart Trilogy: 'The Fall of Koli' by M.R. Carey 🌿
Happy Easter! Hope you're all enjoying your long weekend! 🐣
I've been really enjoying audiobooks this past year. I suprised myself because I'd always said that they weren't for me and then I tried one and fell in love! 🥰
It's been a busy couple of weeks at work and a quite couple of weeks for my reading! 😴
My third in the Perfect series, “Perfect Death” is the next instalment of D.I. Callanach’s adventures by Helen Fields. D.I. Luc Callanach and the Edinburgh Homicide Team are now feeling very familiar to me and in this book I really enjoyed getting some of the back story to characters we’d met previously. If you’ve never read the series, I’d definitely recommend starting at the beginning so you can get to know them all too!
Happy Friday! ☀️
The fiction book of the month for the @londonliteraries was 'The Midnight Library' by Matt Haig 🌙
This month's @londonliteraries non-fiction book was 'Give and Take' by Adam Grant, a book which aims to highlight what effective networking, collaboration, influence, negotiation and leadership skills have in common 💼💸😃
My third Shari Lapena read, “A Stranger in the House”, follows married couple Karen and Tom Krupp. Karen and Tom lead a picture perfect life, living in a enviable home in upstate New York. Then, in the opening pages of this book, Karen has an accident. She’s crashed her car into a pole in a less desirable part of the city. Tom can’t understand why his wife would have left their home without her phone and handbag, and he certainly doesn’t know what she was doing driving around the worst part of town. With a case of amnesia, Karen can’t remember anything either!
It’s been a while since I’ve read any of the Penguin Modern Series, so I decided to pick one up again. I chose ‘Fame’ by Andy Warhol, a book split into three sections, giving his insight on Love, Beauty, and Fame, especially the irony and hypocrisy of these themes. The book is entitled ‘Fame’, but I think that the most powerful piece in this book was on Love, and I’d say that was my favourite and most relatable of the three.
It's my stop on the blog tour for 'The Last Snow' by Stina Jackson and translated into English by Susan Beard 🌨
If you could go anywhere, where would you go? 🌍 I don't know about you but I'd be happy to go absolutely anywhere at this point!!
'The Move' by Felicity Everett is a neighbourhood story following the lives of Karen and Nick, a couple who have recently move to a scenic English village in an attempt to escape the hustle and bustle of London. Karen and Nick have had a difficult few years and they’re hoping that this move will be a fresh start for them both.
I've finally read a Murakami book! 🇯🇵 I decided to start with the most famous, 'Norwegian Wood', originally published back in 1987.

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