The It’s Monday! What Are You Reading meme is now hosted at Book Date
Life…
I had a busy weekend, aside from the usual mundane activities such as grocery shopping, cooking, washing and cleaning, basketball season has begun and I’m back to coaching, and my parents and younger brother (whom I only see once a year or so because he lives in the Northern Territory) came for a visit. We went ten pin bowling, in the photo below you can see my four kids on the left, my parents in front on the right, and behind them my brother and my oldest daughter’s (6ft4!) boyfriend.
What I Read Last Week
Summer Skin by Kirsty Eagar
The Big Rewind by Libby Cudmore
All That is Lost Between Us by Sara Foster
This Was Not the Plan by Cristina Alger
Honky Tonk Samurai by Joe R Lansdale
New Posts
Review: Summer Skin by Kirsty Eagar ★★★★1/2
Review: How To be Single by Liz Trucillo ★★
Review: The Big Rewind by Libby Cudmore ★★★
Win 1 of 10 double passes to see Brooklyn in Aussie cinemas
Blog Tour Review: All That is Lost Between Us by Sara Foster ★★★★1/2
Stuff On Sundays: 2016 Eclectic Reader Recommendations Part 1
What I Am Reading Today
Carly Townsend is starting over after a decade of tragedy and pain. In a new town and a new apartment she’s determined to leave the memories and failures of her past behind. However that dream is shattered in the dead of night when she is woken by the shadow of a man next to her bed, silently watching her. And it happens week after week. Yet there is no way an intruder could have entered the apartment. It’s on the fourth floor, the doors are locked and there is no evidence that anyone has been inside. With the police doubting her story, and her psychologist suggesting it’s all just a dream, Carly is on her own. And being alone isn’t so appealing when you’re scared to go to sleep . . .
What I Plan To Read This Week
(click the covers to view at Goodreads)
Welcome to Quinn, Montana, population: 956. A town where nearly all of the volunteer firemen are named Jim, where The Dirty Shame—the only bar in town—refuses to serve mixed drinks (too much work), where the locals hate the newcomers (then again, they hate the locals, too), and where the town softball team has never even come close to having a winning season. Until now. Rachel Flood has snuck back into town after leaving behind a trail of chaos nine years prior. She’s here to make amends, but nobody wants to hear it, especially her mother, Laverna. But with the help of a local boy named Jake and a little soul-searching, she just might make things right.
So far, twenty-three thousand and ninety six people have seen me online. They include my mother, my father, my little sister, my grandmother, my other grandmother, my grandfather, my boss, my sixth year Biology teacher and my boyfriend James. When Leah Oliphant-Brotheridge and her adopted sister Su go on holiday together to Magaluf to celebrate their A-levels, only Leah returns home. Her successful, swotty sister remains abroad, humiliated and afraid: there is an online video of her, drunkenly performing a sex act in a nightclub. And everyone has seen it. Ruth Oliphant-Brotheridge, mother of the girls, successful court judge, is furious. How could this have happened? How can she bring justice to these men who took advantage of her dutiful, virginal daughter? What role has Leah played in all this? And can Ruth find Su and bring her back home when Su doesn’t want to be found?
The best things in life . . . can be just around the corner. Rachel and Becca aren’t real sisters, or so they say. They are step-sisters, living far apart, with little in common. Rachel is the successful one: happily married with three children and a big house, plus an impressive career. Artistic Becca, meanwhile, lurches from one dead-end job to another, shares a titchy flat and has given up on love. The two of them have lost touch but when Rachel doesn’t come home one night, Becca is called in to help. Once there, she quickly realises that her step-sister’s life is not so perfect after all: Rachel’s handsome husband has moved out, her children are rebelling, and her glamorous career has taken a nosedive. Worst of all, nobody seems to have a clue where she might be. As Becca begins to untangle Rachel’s secrets, she is forced to confront some uncomfortable truths about her own life, and the future seems uncertain. But sometimes happiness can be found in the most unexpected places…
Psychologist sleuth Alex Delaware is surprised to get the call when well-known TV actress Zelda Chase turns up half-naked, half-mad in the LA’s rural Westside. He has little connection to the starlet, save a psychiatric evaluation he performed on her adopted son several years ago, a child who has since vanished without a trace and whom Zelda refuses to talk about. When the actress turns up dead a few weeks later without a scratch on her, Delaware calls in police lieutenant Milo Sturgis to help him crack the case—or at least the wall of silence surrounding it. When the body of a second actress turns up with the same mysterious cause of death, Delaware and Sturgis start to wonder—is this a copycat case or a coincidence? When they uncover the death of another actress, a star from another era who vanished decades ago, never to be found, they realize they’re facing one of their most baffling, mind-bending cases yet.
***********
Thanks for stopping by!
With all the things you do I don’t know how you read all the books you do. Oh my 6′ 4″ that is so tall, he’d be good at basketball though!
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Darkest Place looks very tempting…and so does Breakdown. Enjoy your books, and have a great week.
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You have been busy! Bowling is fun but I am terrible at it.
Your upcoming books sound good. I hope you enjoy them!
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That is a whole lot of new books to check out. Thanks for the update.
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Is that a new Kellerman Shelleyrae? I seem to have missed seeing it for request if it is. I also missed Darkest Place but think it’s RH so must check NetGalley… though vowed I wouldn’t open it for ages as my TBR pile is already a bit scary!
Love the family pic and hope you had a great time.
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Both were from Netgalley, Darkest Place is RH and Kellermans is US Ballantine
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Breakdown and Viral look interesting. I hope you enjoy your books!
My It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? post.
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How to be Single has been on my tbr list for a little while…but maybe I won’t take the time out to read it now. The Flood Girls looks really good. I hope you enjoy your reading this week!
My It’s Monday! Post
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I’m quite interested in Flood Girls and Secrets of Happiness. Thank you for sharing them.
http://readerbuzz.blogspot.com/2016/02/a-tech-of-week-technology-conference-in.html
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Darkest Place & Breakdown look pretty good! I am def adding them to my TBR list 🙂 — new follower as well 🙂 Thanks for sharing!
Happy Reading!
Punkie @Fluttering Hearts Reviews
My It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? Post
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Love the picture! Thanks for sharing it. Yes, those tall guys – I’m married to one – 6’3 and my son-in-law is 6’6. And he has a younger brother that is 6’11. That’s almost too tall to live in a regular house. And he does not play basketball. What a waste! LOL
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Ooh, Darkest Place sounds ultra-creepy! I would have to be in the mood. The Flood Girls sounds very cute though. Kellerman is an author I used to auto-buy until last few years. Maybe I’ll check out his newest one. Thanks and enjoy your week.
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My husband is a fan of Kellerman, but I prefer his wife’s stories to his. A few of the other titles sound very interesting.
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I like how you mention a bit about your life in this post among books. My brother and dad are big time bowlers. My brother has a downstairs room with just bowling balls and equipment. Makes my yarn stash look small. Have a great reading week.
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That Viral book looks like a crazy good thriller!
I’m nearly done with Ship of Magic by Robin Hobb, and then i have a scifi anthology and a fantasy anthology that i need to dip my toes into. That’s what i like about anthologies – I can make a tiny time commitment whenever.
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We don’t have much in common this week on our lists Shelleyrae – aside from the new Jaye Ford which was an engaging read.
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Cute pick. So, we just call it bowling. Is there another kind?
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Lawn bowls is a thing here too Stacy , usually I’d just call it tenpin in conversation:)
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