Debbiereadsbook (1202 KP) rated Dead In The Garden (Grasmere Cottage Mystery #1) in Books
Oct 11, 2018
A step away from Ms Donovan's usual fair, but thoroughly enjoyable one!
After the discovery of the body in the garden, Valor takes it upon himself to try to figure out who is out to get him and Bish, especially after Bish is arrested. Valor speaks with old Harrow school pals and teachers, trying to channel is inner tv detective, just like his favourite shows. Bish struggles away from home, he likes things just so, and the police cell makes him itchy.
I have just one one niggle here, and that it's only Valor who has a voice. I really wanted to hear from Bishan at key points along the way, and I wanted to hear how his mind would process everything. I love that Ms Donovan writes with Autistic characters playing front and centre. Bishan does, though, have the majority voice in book two, Dead in the Pond, so really looking forward to that!
For a murder/mystery, its not overly graphic, just enough to get the point across. There IS romance here, but not a great deal, since Valor and Bishan spend much of the book apart.
I loved the support network Bish and Valor have. Bish's family especially, but Valor's family?? Not so much! I STILL think they might have something to do with it all!
I really have no idea where this is going, nor do I really mind which way it goes, I just wanna read them! I want to see if I can put the clues together fast enough to watch it all play out the way I think it will, or if I'm too slow and don't get the whodunnit til it's all revealed!
So, ONLY because Bishan doesn't get a say here...
4 stars
**same worded review will appear elsewhere**
Garden Living: Designing Outdoor Spaces to Gather, Cook, Play, and Relax
Jonathan Adler and Judy Kameon
Book
Gardens should be spaces that invite gathering, entertaining, and relaxing. Gardens are for living....
How To Propagate 375 Plants: an Illustrated Directory of Flowers, Trees, Shrubs, Climbers, Water Plants, Vegetables and Herbs, with 650 Photographs
Book
This is an illustrated directory of flowers, trees, shrubs, climbers, water plants, vegetables and...
Hobby Hydroponics
Book
Hydroponics as a hobby can provide enjoyment, stress relief, and the gratification of creating your...
Artists' Houses
Marc Walter, Gerard-Georges Lemaire, Henri-Frederic Amiel and Jean-Claude Amiel
Book
"Artists Houses" offers readers the unprecedented opportunity to turn the key and enter the private...
New Crafts: Sticks and Stones: 25 Practical Projects Using Natural Materials
Book
In this book, the natural beauty and texture of sticks, wood, stones and pebbles are celebrated in...
Herman & Wilkinson
Catalogs
App
The Herman & Wilkinson App to connect you to our Auction Rooms from anywhere in the world! The...
Wonderland
Book
Joyce Carol Oates's Wonderland Quartet comprises four remarkable novels that explore social class in...
ClareR (5726 KP) rated The End of the Ocean in Books
Nov 6, 2019
In the present day(2019), 69 year old environmental activist Signe discovers that her home town, and in particular her ex-boyfriend, is responsible for cutting up and shipping off ice from their glacier to sell to the rich, so that they can have glacial ice in their expensive cocktails. She decides to sabotage the shipment, and steals some of it - or what she can carry in her boat. She sails her ship through a terrible storm with the intention of taking it to the person responsible.
In 2041, David and his daughter Lou, arrive at a refugee camp after escaping from war and fire in their French home. There is little water and food, but David is hopeful that his wife and infant son (who they’ve been separated from) will be there or arrive soon.
The two stories are linked when David and Lou find Signe’s boat in the garden of one of the abandoned houses.
This is such a powerful book. It takes current scientific research and arrives at the extreme end of its prediction: drought, famine and war. I had to read it in short chunks, because I found the story so moving and intensely depressing, to be honest. It doesn’t feel exaggerated: I didn’t read it thinking “Well that would NEVER happen”. It’s all too plausible, in fact. I really liked how the two stories ran parallel to one another and joined up in the latter half of the book, with the boat as some sort of symbol of hope.
It’s not all depressing though. There is an element of hope, and we see the enduring strength of the human spirit. I have The History of Bees on my bookshelf, which I will read now - and I’ll definitely look out for the third in this quartet of books.
Many thanks to NetGalley and Simon and Schuster UK for my copy of this book.
Lil World - illustrated world on your photo
Photo & Video, Utilities and Stickers
App
Art-Photo-Editor Lil World has a huge library of unique author illustrations from Different authors....