Showing posts with label rachel joyce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rachel joyce. Show all posts

Books for Christmas Part 7: No category required - the best new fiction of 2014

Whilst the run-up to Christmas can be frenetic like nothing else, that period between Christmas into New Year can be just the time to carve out some space, and make time to tackle something a bit more weighty than at other times of the year. So our recommends for the best fiction of the year - typically newly published hardbacks from some of our biggest authors - may not just be as gifts for others, but an indulgence for yourself.

This year many of our favourite books refuse to be categorised in narrow terms of crime, science fiction, fantasy or contemporary fiction. So we'll leave it up to you to decide which category they fall into, we just commend them to you!

The Bone Clocks - David Mitchell - £20.00
Holly Sykes’ life seems ordinary when we meet her in 1984. But her life has been punctuated by inexplicable precognition and it will take her a lifetime (and us the whole book) to understand the significance of seemingly unimportant events in her teenage years. As we follow her to the present day, and into a near oil-starved future, The Bone Clocks works brilliantly as metaphysical thriller, meditation on mortality and chronicle of our self-devouring times, with brief lapses in the laws of reality making this kaleidoscopic novel one of the most original, exciting and inventive chronicles of the way our world might be heading. It crackles with the invention and wit that have made David Mitchell one of the most celebrated writers of his generation.

(You should also take a look at the beautiful cover! We reviewed this book in more depth back in the Autumn - and we still have a few signed copies which you can email us to reserve).

The Assassination of Margaret Thatcher - Hilary Mantel - £16.99
A brilliant - and rather transgressive - collection of short stories from the double Man Booker Prize-winning author of 'Wolf Hall' and 'Bring Up the Bodies'. Hilary Mantel is one of Britain's most accomplished and acclaimed writers. In these ten bracingly subversive tales, all her gifts of characterisation and observation are fully engaged, summoning forth the horrors so often concealed behind everyday facades.

The Children Act - Ian McEwan - £16.99
A respected high court judge known for her fierce intelligence, exactitude and sensitivity, hides the fact that professional success belies private sorrow – lingering regret of her childlessness, and now, her marriage of thirty years is in crisis. At the same time, she is called on to try the case of a beautiful seventeen-year-old boy, Adam, who is refusing the medical treatment that could save his life. With his devout parents sharing his wishes, time is running out and her judgment - both professional and personal - has momentous consequences for them both. A modern-day parable of the power of - and limits to - logic and faith.


Lamentation - C J Sansom - £20.00
It's been a four-year wait (yes, Heartstone was published in 2010) but Matthew Shardlake finally returns, as an ageing Henry VIII nears the end of his reign. Summoned to Whitehall Palace by Catherine Parr, he learns that a secret book has inexplicably vanished, the only page having been found clutched in the hand of a murdered London printer. It is the Queen’s confessional and Shardlake's investigations take him into the labyrinthine world of the politics of the royal court; a world he had sworn never to enter again. The theft of Queen Catherine's book proves to be connected to a recent terrible death, while his involvement threatens to bring Shardlake himself to the stake. Sansom keeps up the form that have made the Shardlake books one of the bestselling - and best loved - historically series of recent years.

The Love Song of Miss Queenie Hennessy - Rachel Joyce - £14.99
When Queenie Hennessy discovers that Harold Fry is walking the length of England to save her, and all she has to do is wait, she is shocked. Her note to him had explained she was dying from cancer. How can she wait? Told in simple, emotionally-honest prose, with a mischievous bite, this is a novel about the journey we all must take to learn who we are; it is about loving and letting go. And most of all it is about finding joy in unexpected places and at times we least expect. Queenie thought her first letter would be the end of the story. She was wrong. It was just the beginning...

The Paying Guests - Sarah Waters - £20.00
It is 1922, and in South London, impoverished widow Mrs Wray takes in lodgers. The routines of the house will be shaken in unexpected ways. And as passions mount and frustration gathers, no one can foresee just how far-reaching, and how devastating, the disturbances will be. This is vintage Sarah Waters: beautifully described with excruciating tension, real tenderness, believable characters, and surprises.

The Secret Place - Tana French - £14.99
When a schoolboy was murdered a year ago, the police got nowhere in the exclusive boarding school, in the graceful golden world that Stephen Moran has always longed for. To solve it, he will have to find a way into the strange, charged, mysterious world that Holly and her three closest friends inhabit and disentangle the truth from their knot of secrets, even as he starts to suspect that the truth might be something he doesn't want to hear. One of Nicki's favourites of the year.

Moriarty - Anthony Horowitz - £19.99
With pitch-perfect characterisation and breath-taking pace, Horowitz weaves his second relentlessly thrilling new Sherlock Holmes tale which teases and delights by the turn of each page. The game is afoot...

The Rosie Effect - Graeme Simsion - £14.99
The Rosie Project was a hugely enjoyable, word-of-mouth treat of a book: intelligent, beguiling and unashamedly romantic. The Rosie Effect is the charming and hilarious sequel to Simsion's bestselling debut novel, and confirms Don Tillman as one of the most original and endearing literary characters of recent years. With his typically awkward and confused take, he narrates his life as it spins off in unplanned directions. This is pure, wonderful escapism.

The Taxidermist’s Daughter - Kate Mosse - £18.99
Sussex, 1912. In a churchyard, villagers gather on the night when the ghosts of those who will die in the coming year are thought to be seen. As the last notes fade into the dark, a woman lies dead. Connie Gifford struggles to discover who is responsible, but finds herself under suspicion. What is the secret that lies at the heart of Gifford House, decaying home of the once world-famous museum of taxidermy and what sinister forces are at work?

Stone Mattress - Margaret Atwood - £18.99
In these nine tales, Margaret Atwood ventures into the shadowland earlier explored by fabulists and concoctors of dark yarns such as Robert Louis Stevenson, Daphne du Maurier and Arthur Conan Doyle - and also by herself, in her award-winning novel Alias Grace. In Stone Mattress, Margaret Atwood is at the top of her darkly humorous and seriously playful game.

Us - David Nicholls - £20.00
A disintegrating family booked on the trip of a lifetime around Europe gives a brilliant backdrop to explore the bittersweet heart of this family’s failed relationships. David Nicholls brings to bear all the wit and intelligence that graced One Day. A novel about love and family, husbands and wives, parents and children.

Foxglove Summer - Ben Aaronovitch - £16.99
In the fifth of this bestselling series Peter Grant heads to a small village in Herefordshire where the local police are reluctant to admit that there might be a supernatural element to the disappearance of some local children. Peter soon finds himself caught up in a deep mystery and having to tackle local cops, local gods..and some carnivorous unicorns. The Peter Grant series has been a huge hit with readers at Mostly Books, and Aaronovitch serves up another hugely satisfying dose of quirky magical weirdness to his rapidly increasing and loyal fans.

Mrs Bradshaw's Handbook Terry Pratchett 12.99
Authorised by Mr Lipwig of the Ankh-Morpork and Sto Plains Hygienic Railway himself, Mrs Georgina Bradshaw's invaluable guide to the destinations and diversions of the railway deserves a place in the luggage of any traveller, or indeed armchair traveller, upon the Disc. Sample the delights of Dimmuck, the pleasures of Little Swelling , the charm of Shankydoodle, and enough cabbage in all its many guises to satisfy the keenest brassica connoisseur.

Miss Carter’s War - Shelia Hancock - £12.99
It is 1948 and for Miss Carter - one of the first women to receive a degree from the University of Cambridge - it is a time to fight social injustice, to prevent war and to educate her girls. Through deep friendships and love lost and found, from the peace marches of the fifties and the flowering of the Swinging Sixties, to the rise of Thatcher and the battle for gay rights, to the spectre of a new war, Sheila Hancock has created a powerful, panoramic portrait of Britain through the life of one very singular woman.

Ghost Girl - Lesley Thomson - £7.99
Ten-year-old Mary Thornton is taking her little brother home from school. It is 1966,. But that afternoon will change Mary's life forever. She is about to become the only witness to her brother's murder. Only a year after the death of her father Stella discovers unlabelled photographs of deserted streets amongst her father's possessions. And the first photograph in this odd collection dates back to 1966...

Ancillary Sword - Ann Leckie - £8.99
Breq - the soldier who used to be a spaceship is serving the emperor she swore to destroy. She's been given her own warship, her own crew and ordered to the only place in the galaxy she would agree to go: to Athoek Station, to protect the family of the lieutenant she murdered in cold blood. But everything is not as tranquil as it appears. The sequel to Ancillary Justice - which swept all before it scooping many of the major SF awards in 2013 - this is intelligent, satisfying science fiction in the tradition of Iain M Banks and Ursula Le Guin.

Treachery - S J Parris - £7.99
Giordano Bruno, a heretic fleeing the Inquisition, finds a new life working as a spy for Sir Francis Walsingham. Along with his friend, Sir Philip Sidney, Bruno travels to Plymouth and join Sir Francis Drake on his daring expedition against the Spanish. When a murder occurs aboard Drake's own ship, fear and suspicion grip the fleet and threaten to abort the expedition before it begins. Bruno starts to uncover some very dark secrets...and if he fails to find the murderer, it will not just be Bruno who pays the price, but all of England...

The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August - Claire North - £7.99
Harry August is on his deathbed. Again. No matter what he does or the decisions he makes, when death comes, Harry always returns to where he began, a child with all the knowledge of a life he has already lived a dozen times before. Nothing ever changes. Until now. As Harry nears the end of his eleventh life, a little girl appears at his bedside. 'I nearly missed you, Doctor August,' she says. 'I need to send a message.' This is the story of what Harry does next, and what he did before, and how he tries to save a past he cannot change and a future he cannot allow. Blisteringly original speculative fiction from a talentd new author.

Trust In Me - Sophie Mckenzie - £7.99
Julia has always been the friend that Livy turns to when life is difficult.When Julia is found dead in her home, Livy cannot come to terms with the news that she chose to end her own life. The Julia that Livy knew was vibrant and vivacious, a far cry from the selfish neurotic that her family seem determined to paint her as. Troubled by doubt but alone in her suspicions, Livy sets out to prove that Julia was in fact murdered. But little does she realise that digging into her best friend's private life will cause her to question everything she thought she knew about Julia. And the truth that Livy discovers will tear the very fabric of her own life apart.

3 4 Friday: Daring Princesses, Bookgroup Places and Booker Prizes

Today (Friday July 27) is the last day to do your ‘Where's Wally’ hunt around Abingdon and to get your entries in to us for a chance to win prizes in our grand draw. On Saturday (July 28) we will be doing ‘Where's Wally’ activities all day at Mostly Books to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the first book. And anyone coming in dressed as Wally (or Wanda) get's an instant prize. From 2pm we will be drawing prizes – including some fantastic prizes from the shops involved, and the ‘grand prize’ of a very special limited edition ‘Where’s Wally’ book.

Whether it was Bradley Wiggins winning the Tour de France, or the bell-ringing this morning (!), Mostly Books is definitely in the mood for the Olympics. Our collection of Olympics books cannot be missed (literally – it’s the first thing you see when you come into the shop) and includes Mark’s favourite ‘How To Watch the Olympics’ (“a book that will turn yourself into an armchair Olympics expert”) to the official guide to the games for children. Come in and take a look at our range that’s sure to take gold (no, can’t believe we wrote that either...)

Calling all princesses! Have you heard about the princessparty we are hosting on Tuesday August 7? Then read on...

If you were a princess, would you be content to spend all day doing your formal duties and practising the perfect curtsey? Or might you sneak out after dinner and enjoy some freedom playing on a zip-wire after dark? The ‘Rescue Princesses’ is a fab series for girls who are just starting out on chapter books. They feature lots of gorgeous dresses and are set in fairytale castles, but have a great mix of traditional story with a modern twist as these princesses don’t let duty interfere with friendship or fun.

If you like princess stories, or stories about saving animals, or just about girls being daring and having adventures, you have a chance to meet author Paula Harrison and join in some princess fun activities at our Rescue Princess Party on Tuesday Aug 7 at 10.30am. Tickets are £3 and include activities and refreshments – everyone can leave with a crown or tiara they have made. Dressing up is optional, but if you want to dress as a princess, or even the animal you think you’d like to save, we will be awarding prizes! Find out more more here.

And finally: Bookgroups

We get asked a lot about Bookgroups, and although we run three of them, we only seldom have free places. So for those of you would like the opportunity to join you will be pleased to know that we will have vacancies in our Thursday evening group from September.

If you think you'd like to join, or would like to find out more, please come along to our special Abingdon book group evening. We will be discussing the book 'My Policeman' with guest author Bethan Roberts on Thursday Aug 9 at 7.30pm – take the chance to meet us and see if you think our bookgroup will be for you.

The event with Bethan Roberts is being hosted by Abingdon library. Tickets are £4, which includes wine and, of course, is open to all, and we will be joined by members from several local bookgroups.


Finally – we were excited to see that the guest author at the last Abingdon 'Big Read' in the library, Rachel Joyce, is on the Booker longlist with her debut book ‘The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry’ that we discussed earlier in the year:



Congratulations to Rachel and best of luck with the shortlist!

World Book Night 2012: The Unlikely Writing Journey of Rachel Joyce



On World Book Night - an evening of bookish celebration around the country - Abingdon Library was packed to welcome debut novelist Rachel Joyce, author of 'The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry'. The event was the culmination of the 'Oxfordshire World Book Night Read', put together with the energy and enthusiasm of Oxfordshire librarians and publisher Transworld.

The idea was simple: reading groups around Oxfordshire received proof copies to read and discuss ahead of the event, and other Oxfordshire libraries hosted book events on the night too with a variety of authors. It seems to have been a great success.


 

We've loved recommending 'Harold' in the shop (although the title sometimes morphs into the author's own name: we have described it variously as 'Harold Joyce', or 'Rachel Fry', or some other mash-up. Having met the author now, this may become worse). It's one of those perfect books (for us) that appeals to a wide range of readers, but has real emotional depth and ensures Harold stays in the mind for a long time after the book ends.


The physical book itself is very desirable: Transworld have produced a gorgeous hardback, particularly in its choice of understated yet pitch-perfect illustrations at the start of each chapter. (There were appreciative comments on this from the audience).

Rachel has the endearing quality that I think the best writers have of seeming slightly bemused about all the fuss, as though she looked up from writing one day and realised all these people were there wanting to discuss it. Fittingly for a book about a compelling journey, her own route to published author was both fascinating and revealing.

Rachel's background is writing for radio, and has been hugely successful in that field (you can read her impressive radio CV here). She described how writing for radio requires skills honed for telling a story in 7,000 words, and the need for 'hooks' when writing over several episodes (and much bigger hooks if episodes run over the weekend!). Again, as with the best writers, there's a feeling of a long apprenticeship, and so no surprise perhaps that a debut should feel so assured.

Neither is it surprising that 'The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry' grew out of a radio play, one written initially after her own father was diagnosed with cancer. The initial motivation was, she felt, to try to keep her father alive, and though he never saw the book, it is more poignant when, at the start of the novel, when Harold resolves to walk to where an old friend, Queenie, lies dying, he writes "I will keep walking, and you must keep living."


 

Rachel described the act of writing as something she has to do, and despite plenty of obstacles to this (four children, 'nuff said) she described writing as "knitting in your head". This 'knitting' gets done wherever convenient (even in at the cinema whilst on chaperoning duties) and it seems her family also keep her on the straight and narrow, with her husband intervening when trips to research the route threatened to get out of hand ("you're writing fiction, not a travelogue!").


(Following on from learning a little about how Frank Cottrell-Boyce writes, maybe a chaotic household should be seen as a pre-requisite for writers?)

Rachel spoke quietly - but passionately - about her love of the countryside, a plea for map-reading (as opposed to sat-navs) and how these passions end up woven into the books.

 
We were delighted to be involved, it was a wonderful evening, and again shows the magic that can happen when bookshops and libraries come together - particularly to celebrate such a splendid book with a delightful author.
 

Kudos to the library staff who came out in force (and had to stand at the back) but mostly to Alison Barrow from Transworld who chaired the evening so brilliantly, and Rachel herself - go Harold!


We have signed copies of 'The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry' at Mostly Books. Buy a copy through PayPal and have it delivered post-free within the UK here:


Purchase a copy from Mostly Books:

Alternatively, reserve a copy in-store for collection on 01235 525880
or contact books@mostly-books.co.uk


Harold and Maureen and their epic journey of redemption - to Berwick Upon Tweed

We are celebrating World Book Night this year with Abingdon Library at a free event with guest speaker, Rachel Joyce – to which you are invited.

Hotly tipped as being one of the debuts of the year, Rachel Joyce has written a story about a modern day pilgrimage with a very unlikely hero – Harold Fry.

Harold Fry hasn't done anything much since he retired. In fact, looking back, he hasn't ever done very much. So when he sets out to post a letter and ends up deciding to walk over 600 miles to deliver it in person, no-one is more surprised than Harold at his new-found determination.

Fun, thoughtful and touching read where you are always willing Harold to succeed. The journey is less than smooth, but it is also redemptive and a lesson that it is never too late to start again.

Here is what Abingdon Library’s Rosie Tilston has to say about 'The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry':

I loved this book. I was drawn in from the very beginning, captivated by the idea of a man setting out to save someone’s life by walking the length of England. This he does entirely on impulse; he intended to post the letter to his dying friend not deliver it to her personally!

Like Christian from the John Bunyan classic, Harold Fry introduces the reader to the many fascinating people he meets on his journey and with every step and encounter he unravels the tangle of his life. As we, Harold’s travelling companions, piece together his story and each new revelation draws us further into his world we learn too of his wife, Maureen, waiting at home forced to confront her past also, by her husband’s unexpected departure.

Rachel Joyce has written a “page turner” but it would be important not to dismiss it as only that. Here, difficult issues are handled with a touching sensitivity and the reader is left at the end feeling uplifted, moved and changed by the experience
.

World Book Night looks set to become an annual national celebration of books – a good excuse for all lovers of good books to unite on a particular evening to swap and recommend favourite books and to find new authors to read.

We are really pleased to be hosting this joint event with Abingdon Library, Transworld and Rachel Joyce to celebrate World Book Night this year.

Tickets are free. There will be refreshments, as well as lots of enthusiasm about books. This event is expected to be very popular so you do need to get a ticket (from Mostly Books or the library) – although tickets are free.

We look forward to hearing what Rachel Joyce has to say about her own writing journey to becoming such a hotly tipped new authors. The event is on Monday 23 April at 7.30pm.


(Until 29 March, listen to Rachel Joyce on Woman's Hour - fast forward to 34 mins and 30 secs...)