Showing posts with label Nicki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nicki. Show all posts

Nicki Thornton Book Signing - 9th June 2018

Former co-owner of Mostly Books, Nicki Thornton, will be signing copies of her new book, The Last Chance Hotel, in the shop from 1pm on 9th June.  

The Last Chance Hotel is a crime fiction for children and it looks fabulous! 

Seth is the oppressed kitchen boy at the remote Last Chance Hotel, owned by the nasty Bunn family.  His only friend is his black cat, Nightshade.  When a strange gathering of magicians arrives for dinner, kindly Dr Thallomius is poisoned by Seth's special dessert....

A locked-room murder investigation ensues - and Seth is the main suspect. The funny thing is, he's innocent . can he solve the mystery and clear his name, especially when magic's afoot?


We are so proud of Nicki and can't wait to have oodles of copies of this book in our shop.  Pre-order your copy today by contacting us via the usual channels.

The Last Chance Hotel will be published in paperback at a cost of £6.99.

Our Favourite Books of 2013 Part 1: Nicki's Picks

It’s a head-to-head this year for my ‘favourite book of the year’, which is always a good sign that it has been a year of great reading, with some wonderful titles coming through in adult fiction, crime fiction and children’s books. 

Out in paperback this week is ‘Life After Life’ by Kate Atkinson, which has already marked itself out as a must-read by scooping the first award of the year - taking ‘best novel’ at the Costa Book Awards (nearly 20 years after her debut ‘Behind the Scenes at the Museum’ triumphed in the same prize).

‘Life After Life’ is a feast of a narrative structure – being not so much the story of Ursula, but her many stories.

Ursula has many different imagined futures, from circumstances that means she dies within the first few pages, to ones where fate deals her a different hand and she grows and marries.

But whatever life path Ursula follows, it’s a life fraught with lurking danger, as Ursula dies frequently – but the upside to this is that this is literature, so she gets a chance to do better each time. 

There is lots to love about this unusual and complex story – such as characters who appear in different versions of Ursula’s life, moving from bit-part to central role. One of the most satisfying is the narrative on Ursula’s role in World War II as this would have made a satisfying enough story on its own – the heartfelt descriptions of London bombings, each death given as much weight and significance as each of Ursula’s untimely ends.

How often have you wondered how differently things might have turned out if you had just done this, or not done that? I love the literary premise to play with this whole idea and allow one character to have many chances to do it better next time around. What a brilliant concept – and also fun to read, which is a remarkable achievement given that the repeated sections of Ursula's life become quite familiar.

When you’ve waited more than a decade for Donna Tartt to write another novel, it was very satisfying to finally read ‘The Goldfinch’ and it’s hard not to join all those saying how special it is, head and shoulders above everything else I’ve read this year and predicting this will be the one to scoop all the awards over the coming year.

In ‘The Goldfinch’ you can discover a dazzling, Dickensian read, akin to Pip’s journey in ‘Great Expectation’. A modern fable about the highs and lows and essential randomness of modern life, with success just one slip away from failure and any number of people living lives of quiet desperation, just hoping that things will just somehow all turn out all right.

Theo’s journey into much-admired gloss and success is swift and spectacular. But without a centre to his world (the grief at the loss of his mother in the early pages is always present), his judgement and moral values are utterly adrift. His life empty and inexplicable and steering closer and closer to the criminal.

With dips into philosophy about the human condition, philosophy on the value of art, instruction on the forging of antiques; even the detail of the effects of serious dependency on prescription drugs, the journey leaves you feeling in awe of Donna Tartt’s ability to be so precise and so compelling and to make you want to stay with her for every word, not even drawing away or skipping ahead when she’s simply describing a room. It’s also, simply, a good story.

The plot twists its way through unexpected reversals of fortune, unexpected kindnesses and equally devastating let-downs. It cranks up into being a fully-fledged edge-of-the-seat thriller. You hope friends won’t let Theo down again, but you fear the opposite.
It may be tangled and complex and about lots of very big things. But fundamentally, I was left with a feeling that it’s about friendship. And that if you have one person in your life who’ll take a bullet for you, in the end, you haven’t done too bad.

Please don’t make us wait another eleven years to read another.

From one big-stage thriller to another that’s a bit more slow-burn and a very pleasurable read and a romp, Mick Herron’s ‘Dead Lions’ was this year’s perhaps surprise winner of the Crime Fiction Gold Dagger for best crime book of the year.

It centres on a disparate team of spies who have been put out to grass (and has been likened to the hit television show ‘New Tricks’). There is much fun in a bunch of characters who are bickering over whose career is the most derailed and seeing them slowly return to life as they realise they may be right in the centre of something big. As they start to sniff a chance to claw their way back to glory - can they work as a team and remember those skills they used to have?

This is fun writing and a really complex, well-thought through plot, where lots of seemingly random threads only slowly build up to make a coherent picture. It reminded me a lot of the late Reginald Hill’s Dalziel and Pascoe series, with trails going all over the place until you start to wake up yourself to what is actually happening. It’s also got that trademark of Hill’s – witty, intelligent writing and prose that is just really enjoyable to read. Great stuff.

In all the circus surrounding the revelation that Robert Galbraith was none other than JK Rowling, it was easy to overlook the fact that The Cuckoo's Callingwas a terrific crime novel in the traditional style – a private eye taken on to challenge the police conclusion that a model committed suicide.

Never taking no for an answer, former military man-turned gumshoe Cormorant Strike, navigates the unfamiliar world of fashion, making for a likeable sleuth in his determination to look past her wealth and success and to bring justice for Lula Landry, a successful, yet troubled woman.

His investigation is a dogged round of interviews, sieving for inconsistencies, getting under the skin of vividly drawn suspects and witnesses and never giving up, and makes for an intelligent, intriguing and satisfying read.

How great to find gems where the plot didn’t descend into gratuitous violence, a serial killer story thread, or a credulity-stretching conclusion, or expecting us to be satisfied with ‘oh the killer was actually completely insane, but no-one noticed.’

Give me a cerebral plot with a satisfying, properly thought-through ending you couldn’t see coming purely through the strength of the storytelling and I am a happy woman.

It was also a good year for children's books, notable in a welcome increase in the number of illustrated books for older children. Hear, hear for this. A book that is a joy to look at and hold, as well as to read? What a good idea.

Chris Riddell’s ‘Goth Girl’ is enhanced by it’s eye-catching design; even so it’s probably the glorious literary references that will have parents fighting over whether they get to read this with their children.

Ada Goth lives in Ghastly-Gorm Hall with its Secret Garden, its Even-More-Secret Garden, Unstable Stables and a host of literary visitors (Mary Shellfish, the distinguished lady novelist, arrives to stay at a house party) who come to visit poet Lord Goth. Is there a dastardly plot to foil his literary career?

Chris Riddell’s drawings are as generous as the literary references (even the ghost mouse gets his own version of 'Gulliver’s Travels’) and the whole thing is an absolute joy.

It probably won’t be an enormous surprise to learn that one of my favourite children’s reads of the year was actually a mystery story.

In Rebecca Stead’s ‘Liar & Spy’ Georges moves house and meets a new friend, Safer, who has suspicions about one of the neighbours. The pair get involved in all sorts of surveillance trying to work out what the neighbour is up to.

It’s all very intriguing, and then things start to get a little darker, motives and friendships questioned. There is more going on than meets the eye in this short, yet quirky story, which is also a great lesson about standing up for ourselves. Why do we let the bullies make up the rules and why do we play them, is the central question of this really delightful and intriguing tale which is never short on surprises.

Finally, Tom Moorhouse's 'The River Singers' is another book with high production values, wonderful illustrations and a great story set in the modern day with endangered water voles as its main characters.

This unusual but exciting story manages to draw attention to the genuine plight of a threatened species by turning the story into a thrilling adventure and a quest for safety in the shadow of a real-life threat.

And that, in the end, is what storytelling is all about.

Our Favourite Books of 2012 Part 2: Nicki's Picks

Not since Kate Summerscale's 'The Suspicions of Mr Whicher' in 2009, has my outstanding book of the year gone to a non-fiction title. I sincerely hope that Susan Cain's 'Quiet – the power of introverts in a world that can't stop talking' is going to be an equally popular success and as widely read and enjoyed.
'Quiet' is an absolutely fascinating book that celebrates the world's introverts and challenges big corporations, employers in general, and teachers, to reconsider whether the relentless attempt to realise the extrovert ideal is really something to be celebrated. It is a call not to overlook the value of what introverts provide and most of all, a call for balance.

You can also read it as a self-help book – particularly if you are an introvert. It's a great insight to help to understand the value of introverts the world over and understand that by listening to your inner voice you can sometimes achieve remarkable things – even in the face of being constantly told that you should socialise more, speak out more readily and stop worrying about things like details and consequences.

I also found it fascinating to read how differently an extrovert's mind works. My understanding of how they tick and what they find stimulating and enjoyable has been a hugely valuable journey in my ability to understand other people.

It is also a history of psychology over the last century and how personality types are as prone to fashion as anything. Thus in the nineteenth century virtues such as duty were highly regarded, whereas in the twentieth century personal magnetism and ability to be gregarious and work sociably in teams have taken over as the traits we value and reward.

Susan Cain in her own quiet way has set out attempting to redress the balance. She asserts that introverts (rather than seeing themselves as 'failed extroverts') should celebrate their preference for a strong inner life and need to find occasional solitude as the only way to recharge batteries. And she finds countless examples of introverts – from high flying business executives, inspiring teachers, expert negotiators and financiers who have made their investors billions – who have found success by having the quiet strength to go their own way.

It's also a reminder to employers and teachers that anything up to half of the people they have charge of are likely to under-perform when working in big groups or offices with no private space and no time to be creatively alone.

It is being reviewed as one of the most important books for years and her research is both detailed and convincing. Hopefully it might become essential reading for introverts everywhere, but also for extroverts to perhaps understand why some of their fellows are better at coming up with ideas when left alone. And it definitely should be essential reading for anyone who has introvert children, is involved in education and training, or even involved in management and business, to help understand that many accepted practices – such as brainstorming and working in big teams - might actually be counterproductive to getting the best ideas from their most creative people and thinkers.

Interesting, insightful stuff.

My favourite novel of the year was a small, understated novel, but one that was rather special and left me thinking about it a long time afterwards.

Julian Barnes' 'A Sense of an Ending' is a terrific example of 'less is more' and how powerful it can be to leave the reader to do the thinking.

On the face of it the story belongs to an unreliable narrator, one who doesn’t appear to have a very good grasp of what's going on around him.

But as the book goes on it becomes more about how this narrator could be any of us. How many of us can possibly know the consequences of our actions as we don't have the luxury of a novelist's view of the action of our own lives.

It's a fabulously thought-provoking read that questions how successfully any of us are able to re-examine key moments in our lives, to even know what they are, how we might not only have mis-remembered everything, forgotten the rest, and may never understand the consequences of things we have done in the past.

It's a short book that you feel like immediately turning over and reading again the moment you get to the end. It was also a perfect book group read as it provoked so many different thoughts and discussions.
My favourite debut of the year was 'Tell the Wolves I'm Home' by Carol Rifka Brunt, an intricate story told from the point of view of a niece after a beloved uncle has died. It's a story of family secrets (I am rather fond of stories about family secrets) and the pain of growing up and starting to see the world how it really is. And it's about how, however hard we try, we don't always do the best thing for those who are closest to us.

I loved its quiet good sense and unpeeling of layers of family silence. And I felt the quiet tragedy of how from spending every moment playing together as children, how difficult it is to retain that closeness with siblings as we grow up.

I also like a debut with a good publishing story. 'Tell the Wolves I'm Home' was rejected by 50 agents over five months before Carol Rifka Brunt finally got three offers in the same week. Definitely a case of it all being about it landing on the desk of that person who is going to be able to relate to what you are writing.
I think my favourite event of last year was with crime-fiction author Ann Cleeves and I did take great pleasure from her latest novel 'The Glass Room', for just being so thoroughly enjoyable. It was a classic murder mystery, set in an isolated house, where a group of writers, bringing all their ego and envies to a weekend course that ends in a murder. Beautifully atmospheric and very engrossing.

She is very good indeed and to be recommended to anyone who enjoys well-plotted crime fiction with believable characters.


Spies seem to be back in vogue – lots to enjoy in 2012 and looking forward to 2013. But my favourite spy book was William Boyd's 'Waiting for Sunrise', which is a terrific tale of a man who becomes a spy by accident. It's a pacy story, with some great plot twists, but all told with Boyd's wonderful observant character detail.

I always think his women characters are particularly strong and can't wait to see the result now he has been commissioned to write the next Bond novel...

My two favourite children’s books of the year were both contemporary stories, slightly out of odds with the current popularity of dystopian futures and fantasy, perhaps.


The heroine in 'Wolf Princess' by Cathryn Constable seizes a chance to go on a school trip to Russia, something she has always felt drawn to doing.

When things don't go according to plan, Sophie and her two friends are happy enough to stay in a crumbling palace as a guest of a real-life princess. The descriptions of the faded glory and bullet holes in the walls as a constant reminder of revolution are never far from the girl's minds, even as they enjoy sumptuous clothes and fabulous skating parties.

But all is not as it seems and danger is not all over and done with in the past. It's an atmospheric story with a hint of the fairytale about it, and a mystery at its heart.


My second choice 'I’ll be There' by Holly Goldberg Sloan was another debut, one that on the face of it looks like a standard teen romance. But an unexpected plot soon seizes you and it becomes a tale of survival, ending more as a modern fable about what families can mean.


While on the subject of children’s books I can't not mention the fabulous ‘Quest of the Gods’ series by Dan Hunter. It's a young reading series featuring Egyptian gods and it was really the first series my eight-year-old was reading which such enthusiasm and demanding the next in the series, as well as astounding me with his new-found knowledge about Egyptian gods.

Of course, as I write this I can think of plenty of other books that really deserved a mention, but my reading pile is as big as ever and I can’t wait to start discovering my favourite reads of 2013.

(For part 1 of our favourites of the year, click here to view Ellie's picks from 2012)