Friday 26 May 2023

The Keeper of Stories by Sally Page

Chez Maximka, uplifting women's fiction

 


"She can't recall what started her collection... she noticed people were telling her their stories... She knows she is a receptive vessel. As she listens to the stories, the small nod she gives acknowledges what she knows to be true: that for many, she is a simple, homely bowl into which they can pour their confidences".

The Keeper of Stories by Sally Page is an enjoyable easy read, set in Cambridge.

It is arated as no.1 in Women's Sagas and Family Sagas on Amazon, also no.1 in Humour and Satire, however, each of these genre attributions covers only some facets of this story. To be fair, it's not entirely either of them. It's more of the so called uplifting women's fiction.

Following one of my friend's Insta book recommendations, I spotted that it was free on Amazon Prime (still free currently, or £2.99 to buy if you don't have Amazon Prime). I cannot say it's been my read of the year as advertised, but it is entertaining enough.

The main protagonist, Janice, works as a cleaner in a series of Cambridge households. She is good at her job, and is very observant.

"Many of the people she cleans for do bring something special to her life and she hopes, in some small way, that she contributes to theirs".

When Janice is asked to start working for Mrs B, an elderly lady who lives on her own and slowly drowns in the accumulated mess, she is not sure whether to take on the task. Mrs B clearly resents any intervention. In her 90s, she is a formidable harridan, who enjoys her little power games. Under her shrewd and ill-mannered facade, there is a vulnerability which Janice manages to spot. 

Mrs B wants to hear Janice's story. "The old lady sniffs suddenly and demands, "So, what's your story?" No one has ever asked her this before".

Yet Janice is reluctant.

"Everyone has a story to tell. But what if you don't have a story? If you are Janice, you become a collector of other people's stories". Of course, Janice is economic with the truth. She has a story to tell, and what a story it is, she is just not forthcoming to share it with anyone. 

Mrs B claims to be a former spy, and could tell a story or two, or several dozen. This promise of adding new stories to her collection draws Janice like a magnet.

Thus the game begins. Mrs B is telling Janice a story of the ex-mistress of the former king, as well as tidbits of her own adventures, and is hoping to catch her unawares to find any scraps of information from Janice's life. What is the quiet cleaner trying to hide?

As we listen to all the stories, collected by Janice, we have glimpses of her own personality. She is kind, loyal, trustworthy and very unhappy.

Her marriage to a feckless Mike is shambles. He is an unbearable buffoon, who looks down on his wife because of her "lowly" status. Mike cannot hold a job, because he's the type who loves bossing around and coming up with unsustainable projects. 

Janice finds escape in listening to the other people's stories.

"Often the stories are unexpected; at times they are funny and engaging. Sometimes they are steeped in regret and sometimes they are life-affirming. She thinks maybe people talk to her because she believes in their stories."

If the story is not complete, for example, when she hears a snippet of someone's talk on the bus, Janice invents her own ending. She is a dreamer. During her trips on the bus she notices a kindly driver, and immediately creates an image in her head of what he might like to do when he is not driving the bus.

Getting to know Mrs B better, Janice becomes involved in the drama unfolding before her eyes. 

Should she keep a neutral position and not take sides? Will she ever tell Mrs B her story?


The premises of the story sounded promising. I liked the idea of the multiple stories, woven together into one big tapestry. There is a lot of quirky supporting characters including a "swearing" dog Decius.

However, I found it hard to relate to any of the main characters. Mrs B might have mellowed towards Janice, but she is still very much an interfering busybody with bad manners. You might feel sorry for her for having such a nasty son, yet in a way, she is partly responsible for what he has become. Mrs B is one of those women who neglect their offspring in favour of the husband. She failed Tiberius as a mother, and it's not surprising he is not overly fond of her. 

As for the free retelling of Marguerite Alibert's story, I am still not sure why it was necessary to change her name to Becky. It's not like it is not in the public domain, so there is no need to be so hush-hush about it. 

The Keeper of Stories will appeal to readers who enjoy uplifting modern fiction. In a way, it reminded me of The Keeper of Lost Things, minus the occult elements. It also has plenty of eccentric characters and dispenses hope and wisdom in equal measure.

Thursday 25 May 2023

The Missing American by Julie Highmore

 

Chez Maximka, cosy crime


"This had been a mad idea. I wasn't Kinsey Millhone, or Precious Ramotswe. Reading a zillion crime novels wasn't going to make me a hot-shot detective, just as Jane Austen hadn't helped my love life..."

The Missing American by Julie Highmore (published 10 April 2023) is an entertaining cosy crime mystery, set in Oxford.

This is the first book in the Edie Fox Detective Agency series.


Blurb:

New to the private investigator game, Edie Fox is delighted when a handsome American client with disconcertingly dazzling teeth asks her to find his missing cousin, Isabella. Especially when he leaves her a bundle of cash to get started.

However, the case quickly gets complicated, and so does her life when a one-night stand from her Oxford university days gets in touch and asks if her 26-year-old daughter, Maeve, is also his child.

Juggling a chaotic home, a brimming wine glass, a daughter besotted with her new-found daddy, and a rekindled old flame, Edie must try to focus on the job.

But with unreliable witnessses, a less that trustworthy client, and an assistant with her mind on other things, Edie will be up against it and risks losing all.


Edie Fox is a private investigator. Her business is brand new, and she is a total babe in the woods, when it  comes to doing her job. When an American client called Mike Smith visits her office, asking her to find his missing cousin Isabella, Edie is thrilled. According to him, Isabella decided to come to the UK to carry out a photography project, with the theme of comparison between the US and the UK - society, nature, industry. And then she disappeared. 

Mike leaves a big wad of cash as a "small retainer", and promises more money to follow.

Edie is not a natural, when it comes to investigating. She thinks she has the necessary qualifications but in reality she just bumbles through awkwardly.

Her personal life is pure chaos. Edie lives with her daughter Maeve and her preschooler grandson Alfie. Maeve is super lazy, and expects her mother to do a big share of looking after cheeky Alfie. Both ladies are not particularly demanding when it comes to men. Maeve's current boyfriend Hector is obnoxious. It's not quite clear what his redeeming qualities are supposed to be.

When not investigating or looking after her grandson, Edie enjoys getting stoned with her friend Astrid.

On top of the search for the missing American, Edie has to deal with the blast from the past. Terence, her one-night-stand from the uni days, decides to get in touch. Terence has always suspected that Edie's daughter could be his, but wasn't "ready" to meet her until now.

And just like that, Edie and Maeve welcome the long-lost daddy into the bosom of the family. No regrets, no judgement, all is forgiven.

As the investigation progresses, Edie realises that her client is rather fishy. The witnesses are untrustworthy as well. She has to rely on help from the most unexpected quarters.

Before long Edie finds herself in a pickle. In the midst of suspicions and mistrust, she will find out that everything she holds dear is under threat.


Edie is an exasperating heroine. Without having any credentials and qualifications, she decides to become a private investigator and set up a detective agency.

And then she is constantly on the bottle. Not sure what is it with the middle-aged characters in fiction, but it seems to be a trend among the main protagonists these days to be overindulging on a regular basis, as if compensating for the lack of something significant in their lives. Rather than sound amusing, the self-deprecating admonitions on the alcohol abuse are actually quite sad. 

I enjoyed all the descriptions of Oxford and references to the local places (Blenheim Palace, Witney etc), as I know Oxford quite well.

The humour is not of the side-splitting variety, it's more nuanced. You might not LOL, but you will smile and shake your head at the antics of Edie and co. There is a whole lot of supporting diverse characters who add a touch of Oxford eccentricity to the main narrative.


The Missing American is a delightful, quirky and enjoyable mystery. If you are looking for an engaging amusing mystery, with lots of twists and turns, look no further. 

Edie Fox will be back, and I can't wait for the next book in the series. 

Many thanks to Julie Highmore and The Book Folks for my copy of the book!



Chez Maximka, cosy crime set in Oxford


 Author’s bio: 

The daughter of an RAF officer, Julie moved around a lot as a child, which meant many moves and many goodbyes, and fourteen schools to turn up to as a shy new girl. But eventually settled in Oxford in her twenties and, after having three children, studied first at Westminster College, then Oxford Brookes University, where she gained a first class degree in English. As part of the course, she studied creative writing with Philip Pullman, who encouraged her to continue with her writing after graduation. This she did, and her published work includes nine rom-com novels, and more recently, a crime fiction series for The Book Folks. 

The first in the series – features the somewhat flawed, Oxford-based private investigator, Edie Fox; a single mother and very young grandmother who inadvertently gets her precious family caught up in her first big case. 

Although her recent novels have ventured into some dark places, Julie manages to inject humour into the stories without diminishing the seriousness of the situations Edie finds herself in. 

Oxford is a city Julie knows well, but she has chosen to leave the beautiful and atmospheric colleges and cloisters to other authors, and her protagonist is based in the more edgy and diverse east of the city, full of small Victorian houses, students, cafes, delis and retired lecturers. When not writing, Julie enjoys music, binge-watching a good TV series, country strolls, doing the New York Times crossword and hanging out with her husband and ever-expanding family. 


Author’s bio on website: https://thebookfolks.com/author/julie-highmore/ 

Purchasing links: 

UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0C23XYCKG/ 

US: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C23XYCKG/ 

CA: https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B0C23XYCKG/ 

AU: https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B0C23XYCKG


 Social Media links 

Website: https://thebookfolks.com

Insta:@the_book_folks 

Twitter: @thebookfolks 

Facebook: http://facebook.com/thebookfolks 

Blog: https://thebookfolks.com/blog

Julie’s Twitter: @JulieHighmore 


cosy crime


Wednesday 24 May 2023

Death at the Three Sisters by Jo Allen

 

police procedural novel set in Cumbria


"A wave came, and another, the wash from the passing of a lake steamer. The hand bobbed up and its scarlet fingernails tapped on the underside of the glass like a trapped soul.
Kirsty jumped off the couch in a shower of hot, oiled stones and screamed and screamed and screamed."

Death at the Three Sisters by Jo Allen is a masterful mix of crime mystery, police procedural and domestic noir.

This is the tenth book in the DCI Satterthwaite series, which can be read as a standalone.


Blurb:

Three feuding sisters. A faded spa. And a woman, dead in the water...

As they head towards retirement, Suzanne, Hazel and Tessa Walsh are locked in bitter disagreement about the future of the lakeside beauty spa they jointly own. Should they keep The Three Sisters going as their parents wished, or should they sell to a neighbouring hotelier who seems determined to acquire the failing business, even at a preposterously high cost?

When their employee, Sophie Hayes, is found drowned close to the spa one cold January morning it rapidly becomes clear that it's not an accident. Sophie has been murdered. But who could possibly want to kill her - or was she mistaken for someone else? As DCI Jude Satterthwaite seeks the answers he and his team dig ever deeper into the complicated and embittered relationships between the sisters and their neighbours.

As the investigation proceeds Jude becomes convinced that Sophie's murder may only be the beginning. It's not long before a shocking and tragic turn of events proves him correct and he and his team find themsleves in a race to prevent a further, final tragedy overtaking the Three Sisters. Can he uncover what deadly secrets the sisters are prepared to die - or kill - for, or will he be too late?


When a weary young mother, Kirsty, arrives to The Three Sisters lakeside spa for a relaxing massage, she cannot help noticing that the place looks tired, with a peeling paint, and the masseuse seems rather harrassed. It is certainly far from being sophisticated or glamorous, but harmless enough. The location is everything, with the serene views over the lake from the glass panels of the massage parlour pods. Nobody can predict that this quiet peaceful location could be a murder scene. It is Kirsty who notices the hand of the dead woman in the water through the glass panel.

When the body is recovered, it becomes clear that it's not an accidental drowning. Sophie Hayes was killed before her body was dumped in the lake. What is the motive of the murder? Did someone want her dead, or is it a case of the mistaken identity?

DCI Jude Satterthwaite and his team begin their investigation, questioning the owners of the lakeside spa, where Sophie worked. It appears that she was an ambitious young woman with good prospects, supported and advanced by the oldest of the Walsh sisters, Suzanne. Did the other sisters, Hazel and Tessa, see her as a potential rival who would destabilise the family business? 

The tension between the sisters is palpable. Three frustrated women are trying to hold on to the failing legacy founded by their authoritarian parents. The parents are no longer alive, but their influence is still damaging lives of their children. 

Their major disagreement centres around their livelihood. The business is failing, it needs funds and new ideas to keep it afloat. Along comes a tempting offer from the owner of the neighbouring hotel. The offer is preposterously high, so what is the agenda of the hotelier? 

The antagonism between the Walsh sisters is spiralling out of control, dragging more bystanders into their hellish maelstrom. Soon more ghastly events follow. 

Will Jude and his team be able to prevent further tragedies?


This book accentuates the police-procedural-side of the mystery more than the previous books in the series. There is less emphasis on the personal lives, and some major characters barely appear in this story. 


Death at the Three Sisters is a skilfully constructed mystery/police procedural, remarkably evocative of the Cumbrian countryside. It is a compelling page-turner with realistically flawed protagonists. The agonising family dynamics makes for a fascinating character study.


P.S. Having read several books in the series (I started with the book no.4), by now I am well acquainted with the relationships among all the main protagonists. They have become as close as good friends, and I am at times exasperated by their yo-yoing love affairs.

I've been following Jude's personal storyline for a while, and just wish he would stop his irrational obsession with Becca. It's not clear what's so special about her. I just want to tell Jude, ditch her for good. Please. 


This post is part of the blog tour for Death at the Three Sisters.

Many thanks to Jo Allen and Rachel's Random Resources for  my copy of the book!


Chez Maximka, books set in Cumbria


Purchase Link - https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0BVRP624W


Chez Maximka, crime fiction set in Cumbria



Author Bio –

Jo Allen was born in Wolverhampton and is a graduate of Edinburgh, Strathclyde and the Open University, with undergraduate and postgraduate degrees in geography and Earth science. She's been writing for pleasure and publication for as long as she can remember. After a career in economic consultancy she took up writing and was first published under the name Jennifer Young, in genres of short stories, romance and romantic suspense. She wrote online articles on travel and on her favourite academic subject, Earth science. In 2017 she took the plunge and began writing the genre she most likes to read -- crime.

Jo lives in the English Lakes, where the DCI Satterthwaite series is set. In common with all her favourite characters, she loves football (she's a season ticket holder with her beloved Wolverhampton Wanderers) and cats.


thrillers set in Cumbria


 

Social Media Links –

https://www.facebook.com/JoAllenAuthor

https://twitter.com/JoAllenAuthor

https://www.instagram.com/joallenauthor/




Thursday 11 May 2023

The Vanishing of Class 3B by Jackie Kabler ( review + #giveaway )

 

psychological thriller


"Well, an entire bus load of kids and teachers can't just disappear, can it? They must be somewhere?"

The Vanishing of Class 3B by Jackie Kabler is a suspensful psychological thriller/ police procedural fusion. 


Blurb:

One spring morning, a bus full of children and their teachers from a Cotswolds primary school head off on a much-anticipated day trip.

But as night falls and the well-heeled parents - one or two of them famous, as well as wealthy - wait at the school to collect their weary offspring, it soon becomes clear that something has gone very wrong.

The children and their teachers simply do not come back.

What's happened doesn't seem possible.

How can an entire class of children simply vanish?


One sunny morning in early April a group of children from Littleford Primary go on a day trip to the Cotswold Wilderness Park. Children are excited, waving animatedly to their parents, who are waiting in the school yard for the departure of the bus. 

When the bus fails to come back by 6pm, the parents begin to worry. The headteacher is desperately trying to get in touch with the staff members who are with Class 3B. Every number goes straight to voicemail, and she is not able to get hold of any of them. The park must be closed by now, and the children should have been back a while ago.

The parents insist that the head needs to call the police.

Detective Superintendent Sadie Stewart knows that something is seriously wrong. Children and the teachers who accompany them on the ill-fated school trip have vanished into the thin air, and parents are left to wait in pure agony. 

There are ten children on the Class B trip. Police make a list of seventeen adults, including three sets of high-profile, wealthy parents.

Reynold Lyon is a TV presenter who's married to Petra, the model, well known in her own right. They are parents to the twins on the bus.

Eldon Beckford is a famous chef, who does TV cooking shows. His wife Amy works with him at their restaurants. 

And then there's Spike Greer, ex-footballer, bit of a legend.

Suddenly a kidnap becomes a very real possibility, especially if accident or breakdown is ruled out. 

When the bus is found abandoned in the woods, the whereabouts of the occupants of the bus are unknown. The police can only speculate about what and how might have happened.

When ransom texts start to appear, it becomes clear that one of the parents could be the cause of all this calamity. Who is it, and what have they done to warrant such a reckoning?


One narrative voice is followed by another, so that we get a different point of view to get closer to the truth. And the truth is not very palatable, whichever side you follow.  Different points of view criss-cross, clash and build the whole picture bit by bit.

When the secrets are revealed, you're left wondering if you can ever fully know what's in the heart and mind of those who are the closest to you.

It's not just the adults who tell their tales, as one of the children joins in the story and reveals an important clue.

It's hard to relate to any of the adults in this story. Self-absorbed and egocentric, they appear to be more concerned about keeping their skeletons in the closet, and not sharing any relevant information with the police. Though to be fair, the police don't come out as particularly competent during the investigation.

I found the motives of the mastermind behind the kidnapping operation rather far-fetched. The people who devised this plan, are egomaniac, devious and callous. 


As the secrets begin to unravel, we ask ourselves, just how rational the perpetrators could be to commit such an atrocity? 

The premises of the story sounds promising, there is plenty of twists in turns, and the ending is rushed.

The plotline reminded me a lot of In Safe hands by J.P. Carter, where a group of children is snatched from the nursery school. It also deals with the distressed parents and the rather convoluted plans hatched by the kindnappers.


The Vanishing of Class 3B is a chilling crime thriller, with dark undertones. Gripping and tense, it's an inventive game of cat-and-mouse.


This post is part of the blog tour for The Vanishing of Class 3B.

Many thanks to Jackie Kabler and Rachel's Random Resources for my e-copy of the book!


Chez Maximka, psychological thriller


Purchase Links

UK - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Vanishing-Class-3B-bestselling-breath-taking-ebook/dp/B0B9SFVY9W

US - https://www.amazon.com/Vanishing-Class-3B-bestselling-breath-taking-ebook/dp/B0B9SFVY9W


Author Bio – 

Jackie Kabler is an Amazon number one and USA Today bestselling author of psychological thrillers, including The Perfect Couple, Am I Guilty?, The Happy Family and The Murder List. Her novels have sold nearly a million copies around the world and have been translated into eight languages. Previously she worked as a newspaper reporter and then in television news for twenty years, including nearly a decade on GMTV. She later appeared on BBC and ITV news, presented a property show for Sky, hosted sports shows on Setanta Sports News and worked as a media trainer for the Armed Forces. She now combines writing with working as a presenter on shopping channel QVC. Jackie lives in Gloucestershire with her husband.

 

psychological thriller


Social Media Links –

Twitter @jackiekabler

Instagram @officialjackiekabler


Giveaway to Win a Signed Copy of The Vanishing of Class 3B (Open to UK Only)

*Terms and Conditions –UK entries welcome.  

Please enter using the Rafflecopter box below.  

The winner will be selected at random via Rafflecopter from all valid entries and will be notified by Twitter and/or email. 

If no response is received within 7 days then Rachel’s Random Resources reserves the right to select an alternative winner. 

Open to all entrants aged 18 or over.  

Any personal data given as part of the competition entry is used for this purpose only and will not be shared with third parties, with the exception of the winners’ information. 

This will passed to the giveaway organiser and used only for fulfilment of the prize, after which time Rachel’s Random Resources will delete the data.  

I am not responsible for despatch or delivery of the prize.

 Please note that this giveaway will appear on several blogs taking part in the blog tour.

Chez Maximka is hosting the Rafflecopter gadget for free for the purposes of the book promotion. 

I have no access to the data collected, and am not responsible for the selection of the winner or the dispatch of the prize.

Good luck!

 


a Rafflecopter giveaway

Tuesday 9 May 2023

All Around the World Degustabox

  Degustabox is a monthly food and drink subscription box. It's an excellent way of discovering new products which have only just appeared in the shops, or those which have been around for a while, but you haven't had a chance to try them yet.

Thanks to Degustabox, I have found new favourites to add to our shopping list, including some products which I otherwise wouldn't have tried.

Each time a monthly box arrives, its contents are a total surprise. You get a good selection of foods and drinks.

If you haven't tried Degustabox subscription box yet, and would like to have a go, I have a £3off discount from your first box (and you can unsubscribe any time), just use code DKRLN when placing an order. 

What did we get in the All Around the World Degustabox box?


Chez Maximka, subscription food box



Mission Mini Wraps Original/Wheat & White (£1.20 for 6 wraps) are excellentt for easy meals in minutes. Soft and squishy, they are great receptacles for a variety of fillings and flavours. Mini wraps are just right for the children's lunchboxes, or as a light after-school snack.

Wheat & White wraps are made with wholemeal flour.

Suitable for vegans

Grill them, shallow fry or sizzle in a pan to create a tasty meal, stuffed with any ingredients of your choice. 

My son enjoyed them, stuffed with Ragu Bolognese, fresh thinly sliced cucumbers and grated cheese. My personal favourite combination might be an odd one, but very tasty - hummus with seaweed salad.

There are two packs in the box.

Available in ASDA, Tesco & Sainsbury's.


Chez Maximka, easy meals in minutes


Idahoan Perfect Mash Buttery or Cheddar Cheese flavoured (£1.65) is made with real potatoes, grown in the heart of Idaho, America's potato state. Using their Fresh dry technology to remove water carefully, the small pack expands progressively as you add hot water or milk. Ready in less than a minute, one pack serves 3.

Nutritional values: 144kcal and 1g of salt per 1/3 pack, when prepared.

Suitable for vegetarians, gluten free.

Available at ASDA, Morrisons, Sainsbury's, Tesco, Waitrose, Co-Op, Spar and on Ocado and Amazon.

You would receive one of two flavours in the box.

We got Cheddar flavoured mash, and it was a tasty side dish to go with the pan-fried dish in tomato sauce.


Chez Maximka, quick and easy meals in minutes


Serious Pig Crunchy Snacking Cheese with Truffle (£1.60 for 24g pack). This tasty snack is made with mature Italian Quattrocento cheese (similar to Parmesan), which is crumbled and baked in the oven to create a seriously crunchy snacking cheese.

Very moreish, this snack is a great accompaniment to a glass of cold white wine or ale.

Nutritional values: 140kcal and 10g of protein per pack.

Vegetarian (but not vegan).

Available on Serious Pig's web shop, Amazon and at Sainsbury's.


Chez Maximka, cheese snacks


Maggi So Juicy Butter Chicken and Sweet Chilli Halloumi Recipe Mix (£0.99 each) is a seasoning mix. The packet includes seasoning & cooking bag. Simply add chicken and vegetables or halloumi, rice and vegetables to create a tasty mid-week meal.

These are tasty blends of herbs and spices, which add an extra zing to your cooking.

One pack serves 4.

Nutritional values: 410kcal and 1.12g of salt per pack for Butter Chicken, and 483kcal and 2.23g of salt for Halloumi seasoning pack.

Available in all major supermarket chains. You should receive two packs in your box.


Chez Maximka, seasoning mixes


Coco Pops Chocos (£3.29) is a new crunchy cereal from Kellogg's. This is the latest additon to the Kellogg's range of cereals. The shapes are curved, crunchy shells with the chocolate taste of the Coco Pops Original.

Nutritional values: 114kcal and 6.6g of sugar per 30g serving. Rich in vitamin D, 50% daily needs, made with natural grains, contains no artificial colours or flavours. There are 14 servings in a box.

Available in all major supermarkets.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box

Chupa Chups Mini Bag (£1.86) is the world's no.1 lollipop. A trusted global brand, enjoyed by generations since 1958. Their most loved flavours: Cola, Strawberry, Orange and Apple are now available in a half-size lollipop. A lovely mini-treat.

Nutritional information: natural colourings only, added vitamin C, 46kcal and 9.9g of sugar per mini-lollipop.

Available at ASDA, Home Bargains, WHSmith and on Ocado.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box


Yogi Tea Detox Organic/ Immune Support/ Stomach Ease (£2.75) is the original organic and ayurvedic tea brand. 

You will receive one of 3 flavours. We got Yogi Tea Stomach Ease, an ayurvedic blend with cardamom, fennel and ginger. This is a warming, fragrant, spicy and sweet tea blend, which is easy on the stomach.

There is also an easy yoga exercise suggested on the box, to aid digestion and relieve a negative effect of overeating or eating too quickly.

Available on Ocado, Amazon, at Holland & Barrett and many independent health food stores. Selected products are in Waitrose and Morrisons.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box


Double Dutch Drinks Ginger Beer/ Cranberry & Ginger Tonic (£0.90) is a range of premium mixers and tonics. In the last couple of years we've had a few different flavours of Double Ducth Drinks in Degustabox deliveries, and they are all high quality drinks.

Made with three types of ginger, fiery Ginger Beer is the ultimate blend of spice and zest.

We received Cranberry & Ginger Tonic, which goes well with dark spirits, like rum. It has warmth, and a complex flavour of spicy and sharp.

Available at Waitrose, Tesco and on Ocado and Amazon.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box


Punchy Drinks Blood Orange & Cardamom/ Peach, Ginger & Chai/ Cucumber, Yuzu & Rosemary (£1.60 per unit) is a low calorie, all natural soft drink, bursting with flavour.

With 50% of your daily vitamin D in every can. All natural, low cal, gluten free, vegan.

We received Blood Orange & Cardamom, which proved to be a very refreshing and flavourful drink.

Available at WHSmith, Planet Organic, Selfridges, Fortnum & Mason, Clean Kitchen, Ole & Steen, Ocado, Amazon and at Punchydrinks.com.

You should receive one unit in your box.


And finally, the Product of the Month - Plantastic Protein Boost Satay Noodles with Sweet Pepper and Cajun Rice with Tomato & Pepper (£1.15). These are new 100% plant-based, high in protein meals.

Prepare meals, like you would any pot noodle dish, just pour in boiling water, gently stir, cover with lid, leave for a couple of minutes, stir again, leave for another few minutes.

Protein Boost Satay Noodles with sweet red pepper is a pot of dried noodles in a Satay sauce mix with textured wheat protein, red pepper, onion and sweetcorn.

Nutritional values: 247kcal and 1.05g of salt per pot.

Cajun Rice with Tomato & Pepper pot contains pre-cooked long grain rice in a spicy Cajun sauce mix with textured wheat protein and peppers.

Nutritional values: 239kcal and 5.9g of sugar per pot.

Perfect for a quick meal to prepare in an office, or when you have no time to cook from scratch.

You should receive two units in your box.

Available at Tesco.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box


What is your favourite product from the latest Degustabox?

Saturday 6 May 2023

A Stepney Girl's Secret by Jean Fullerton ( review + #giveaway )

 

WWII saga

"...she could have told him to sod off when he asked her name, but she didn't. Well, perhaps she wouldn't have used those actual words. Young women named Prudence, who dressed in expensive suits and spoke with a country lilt instead of a cockney twang, didn't as a rule tell people to sod off so... Jack's smile widened. Who says an oil-covered engineer with a daughter, an ex-wife and a less-than-spotless past couldn't win a fair lady?"


A Stepney Girl's Secret by Jean Fullerton is a moving and evocative saga, set in East London during WWII. It follows lives of several women who have moved to live in a rectory in Stepney, their aspirations, hopes and heartbreak.


Blurb:

East London, 1940.

At the outbreak of war, hopeless romantic Prue Carmichael and her sister must leave their rural parish behind when their father is posted to a church in Stepney. To Prue, the blitz-ravaged streets of London seem an unlikely place for love to bloom - until a chance encounter throws rakish engineer Jack Quinn into her path. But as their connection deepens, his troubled past begins to emerge, and Prue realises Jack has secrets to hide...

Luckily, in between starting work at a railway yard and helping her mother house Jewish refugees in the parish, Prue manages to keep her mind off love and on the wartime effort. However, Jack isn't the only man who's fallen for Prue - and when he is recruited into Churchill's secret underground army, an unexpected suitor offers a fresh distraction.

As air raid sirens sound and the Battle of Britain rages overhead, Prue Carmichael must face some of the greatest horrors of her young life. Meanwhile, she is waging her own battle - the fight between her heart and her head.

Amidst the ruins of war, will Prue and Jack's love find a way to flourish?


Prue's family arrive to London from a quiet country parish. Prue wants to help with the war effort and finds a job at the Shunting Yard, working on the trains. Her snobbish mother is not happy for her daughter to work among "the sort of people" she deems lower in status. Her father Hugh, a placid man, seems to be under his wife's heel.

Prue is a determined young woman, who knows her mind. She ignores her mother's complaints, insisting that it is a crucial work, and she will be doing her bit, like thousands of other women

She first encounters Jack accidentally in the street, and is immediately drawn to his cheeky grin and likeable personality. Jack is an engineer at the railway station, who is desperate to be enlisted. However, the railway workers are a reserved occupation, and his boss says he cannot let him go.

The mutual attraction is almost instantaneous. An unlikely romance blossoms. Jack's past catches up with him, and Prue discovers he has secrets to hide. 

Jack is not the only suitor to vie for her attention. Handsome but rather shallow Father David believes he finds a perfect future wife in Prue. 

Will Prue follow her heart? 


Prue is an admirable strong protagonist. She could have easily followed her mother's footsteps and found herself a respectable husband who would provide for her and offer her a stable home to run. Instead she actively seeks employment, and doesn't mind getting her hands dirty. At first her social standing provides grounds for mockery among the working class girls. Soon, however, she proves her mettle. You cannot but admire her determination and stamina.

Prue's character represents the great changes in the society, when women applied for work, helping with the war effort, while the men went fighting. Not everyone was happy about it. Many men who stayed behind, were resenting women working among them.

Fullerton creates an authentic, believable background. The class division, and the inverted snobbery, rings true.

There is a plethora of colourful supporting characters. Alongside the main plotline, there are moving stories of the refugees who are invited to live at the rectory with the Carmichaels.


A Stepney Girl's Secret will appeal to the fans of historical fiction, set during WWII. It is an engaging story, that transports you back in time. It's a memorable page-turner of love and hope, grief and resilience.

There is a romance, suspence and drama aplenty.


This is not the first book by Jean Fullerton that I've read. I have enjoyed The Ration Book series, set in London during the WWII, in the past. The new series promises to be as absorbing and riveting.


This book review is part of the blog tour for A Stepney Girl's Secret.

Many thanks to Jean Fullerton, Corvus and Rachel's Random Resources for my copy of the book!


fiction set in London during WWII, Chez Maximka


Purchase Links

UK - https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B0BLRB2481/

US - https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0BLRB2481/



Author Bio – Born and bred in East London Jean was a District Nurse by trade and ended her thirty-year career in health care as a senior lecture in Health and Nursing Studies in London Southbank University.

She had published twenty sagas all set in East London with both Orion and Atlantic the most recent of which is the highly successful Ration Book series. She has also recently released her autobiography A Child of the East End.

Social Media Links –

Website: http://jeanfullerton.com/


Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Jean-Fullerton-202631736433230/?ref=bookmarks


Twitter:  https://twitter.com/JeanFullerton_



fiction set in London during the WWII


 

Giveaway to Win 5 x Copies of A Stepney Girl’s Secret (Open to UK & Ireland Only)

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