Review – Her Sister’s Death by K. L. Murphy
Her Sister’s Death by K. L. Murphy unravels two timelines that only cursorily overlap. Not so gripping tale of mystery with a flat dénouement.
Her Sister’s Death by K. L. Murphy unravels two timelines that only cursorily overlap. Not so gripping tale of mystery with a flat dénouement.
Kid Beowulf – Songs and Sagas by Alexis E. Fajardo blends epic adventure with youthful energy, reimagining classic tales for a new generation
The Cat Who Couldn’t Be Bothered charmingly captures the contrast between a black and white cat with their colourful friends. A tale of inclusion and wellbeing.
Lenny Henry’s inspiring journey, from a talented child to a comedy legend, is beautifully captured in Maria Isabel Sanchez Vegara’s book
“The Hare-Shaped Hole” beautifully illustrates life’s ups and downs through Hertle and Bertle’s friendship, showing how grief is love with nowhere to go.
“The Confession” intrigues with its premise but falters in execution, featuring an unreliable narrator, Ella, whose troubled past shapes her actions.
Remarkably Bright Creatures has enabled me to learn a lot about octopi yet more about compassion and resilience.
Nobody But Us shows us the extreme lengths you can go to to right a wrong.
All the elements rolled up make Relatively Normal Secrets a fine middle grade read.
Utopia PR is an audiobook that will have you chuckling, bemused at how similar that world is to ours. It depicts a world that on the surface appears far fetched or extreme but worryingly is not.