
Magic Numbers— Panda Games for kids
Education and Games
App
Welcome to an Universe of Numbers! Magic numbers is an intuitive and educational game for your baby...

Kiki’s Orderly Adventure—BabyBus
Education and Games
App
Begin a journey with Kiki and friends to set order in a magical world of witches and spells. Guide...

Valleywood: The Autobiography of Lateysha Grace
Book
Since exploding on to our screens as part of the MTV show The Valleys, diva Lateysha Grace has...

The House in France: A Memoir
Book
In 2009, six years after her mother's death, Gully Wells returns to La Migoua, the house in Provence...

For the Fourth Generation
Book
For the Fourth Generation takes its title from a family memoir by Eva O'Malley written in 1954. In...

No Surrender: Faith, Family, and Finding Your Way
Book
A Navy SEAL who first overcame a crippling childhood condition and then a devastating training...
Handbook of Children's Rights: Global and Multidisciplinary Perspectives
Michael Freeman, Martin D. Ruck and Michele Petersen-Badali
Book
While the notion of young people as individuals worthy or capable of having rights is of relatively...

God Bless Mrs Mcginty!: My Life and the Sunday Post
Book
Entertaining, lively, informative and direct, this memoir by Bill Anderson about his life and times...

Ivana A. | Diary of Difference (1171 KP) rated Queenie Malone's Paradise Hotel in Books
Oct 5, 2020
The book flows in two parallel timelines: Tilda in the present and little Tilly in her childhood. Tilda has a broken relationship with her mother, who killed her dad. After her mum dies, Tilda goes to a place called Queenie Malone’s Paradise Hotel, to find the truth of what happened in the past.
The writing style of when Tilda is little was hard for me to connect to. If felt as if the grown up version was talking in both timelines. The book is very slow, with no major plot twist, which made it boring. We had the whole ending dumped in the last chapters, with no anticipation. She is a girl that clearly has a troubled past, and she has with her a sense of mystery, as she is able to see what other people can’t. She is very attached to her father, even though he was absent most of her life, and she spent her childhood and teenage years holding a grudge against her mother.
And yet, I didn’t care about her.
In fact, I didn’t care about anyone in this book, and by the end, I just wished for the story to finish. I am sad that I couldn’t relate to this book, and I wish I liked it. But I didn’t. Moving on. A shame though, it has such a beautiful cover.If the synopsis seems interesting to you,
I would still encourage you to give it a go and let me know what you thought. You opinion is also valid.

ClareR (5879 KP) rated The Illustrated Child in Books
Oct 26, 2020
Tobias creates a series of beautifully illustrated books starring both Romilly and Monty, and their lives are changed. They find fame, as readers believe that the books are a kind of treasure hunt - which, incidentally, reminded me of the Kit Williams book, Masquerade, published in the late 1970’s. Strangers start to camp out in their garden, digging holes all over their land to find the treasure - meaning that Romilly is unable to leave the house.
Life changes again when Tobias’ behaviour becomes more and more erratic, Romilly’s mother comes back in to her life, and she meets her grandmother. Things seem to be continuously changing, and nothing is consistent - there’s no stability in Romilly’s life.
This book was not at all what I expected. It started out as something of an idyllic childhood, but as time went on, Romilly’s life is irrevocably changed. I felt so much sadness for her, and there were times when I was almost in tears (you might need a hanky!). This deals with some pretty serious themes: dementia, mental illness, death and child abuse. All the way through I was rooting for Romilly and hoping that she would get the help that she needed and deserved. This is such a beautifully written book, and I would have no hesitation in recommending it.
Many thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for my e-ARC.