Book Review: The Accidental Mother by Rowan Coleman

Sophie has a great career in event planning, a brilliant social life, a wardrobe full of designers, her own flat in London… and a fear of commitment. So, you can imagine what happens when a social worker turns up at her office and tells her in the conference room that not only has her best friend from school died in an accident, but having drunkenly agreed to be Godmother, now has sole custody of two bereaved little girls. What follows as she makes an attempt to find the girls’ missing father will make you laugh and cry and ultimately smile.

Parts of the writing are a little cheesy. It seems a little ridiculous that EVERY guy she meets is madly in love with her, but Sophie remains very much a likeable character. As a single twenty-something living in London, I can completely identify with Sophie’s first reaction. If someone handed me my friend’s two children (as much as I love them…from a distance) and left me to it, I’d freak too. The little touches of humour in the book really make it, such as her cream sofa getting thrown up on by an over-tired 3 year old, or her having to bathe the kids in Chanel bubbles is pretty funny.

I read this book over the Christmas holidays, curled up on the sofa with hot chocolate and wine (not at the same time!). It’s definitely worth a read.

Book Review: The Slap by Christos Tsiolkas

Set in the contemporary Australian suburbs to a backdrop of second generation immigration and overt drug use, The Slap deals with the lives of various characters all interlinked by one incident at a barbecue where a man slaps an overprotected child that is not his, in front of the parents and all of the party’s guests. The fallout affects friendships, family and relationships as they all struggle with their opinions on the subject.

Truly a book for the modern times, this wasn’t a favourite of mine. This is possibly because I am not a parent or wife yet and therefore can’t imagine what it would be like to be in the female characters’ positions. I like a romantic happy ending, not gritty real life. (My parents would say that this is why I spend my life constantly disappointed – because life is unfortunately not like the movies – I dare to dream).

The book was a huge success in Australia and become a very popular television series and will soon be made into a film. Maybe I’d enjoy it more on the screen.

Have you read it? What did you think?

Book Review: Room by Emma Donaghue

This book is an absolute page turner. I could not put it down, staying up until 2.30am to finish it once I got towards the end. Told from the point of view of a little boy Jack, who has grown up in one room with his mother, it is heart achingly poignant. The storyline echoes the real life headlines about Austrian Josef Fritzl and his secret family locked in a room.

What I loved about this book is the fact that Jack says just enough for the reader to see his outlook on the world, but also know what’s really going on. You catch glimpses of his mother’s true feelings, having been captive for years, but you never lose Jack’s innocent take on it. All he knows is Room. Everything else is TV, right?

Jack’s mother battles daily with him growing up and trying to explain things to him. He knows he must hide in the cupboard when ‘he’ comes at night, but he doesnt know where ‘he’ comes from or why ‘he’ comes. He brings food though, and he sometimes brings toys. As Jack turns five and his curiosity grows, he and his mother have to work out how to escape Room.

Reading Corner 2013

The Great Gatsby Art

‘What you read when you don’t have to determines what you will be when you can’t help it’
- Oscar Wilde

This time last year I wrote this piece about my newfound love of reading and about my pledge to read 20 books in 2012. Guess what? I read 19.5 again! Oh, and 7 half books too – so I kind of made the 20, right? If you follow me on Goodreads, then you may already know what I have read but here is the shortlist:

A Place of Yes by Bethenny Frankel

The Paris Wife by Paula McClain (my review)

Rapid Italian vol 1 by Earworms (audiobook)

The Great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald

Rules of Civility by Amor Towles

Skinny Bitch by Rory Freedman

I heart Vegas by Lindsay Kelk

Notes on a Scandal by Zoe Keller

The Jane Austen Book Club by Karen Joy Fowler

How to be a Woman by Caitlin Moran

Tigers in Red Weather by Liza Klaussman

On the Island by Tracey Garvis-Greaves (my review)

Fifty Shades of Grey by E.L. James

Live and Laughing by Michael McIntyre

The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller

The Slap by Christos Tsiolkas

A Streetcat named Bob by James Bowen (my review)

Is it just me? by Miranda Hart (my review)

Room by Emma Donaghue

The Accidental Mother by Rowan Coleman

Books on Goodreads

I’ve pledged to complete 25 books this year. I’ve got a couple of books started already which gives me a headstart, plus my Book Club and my commute on the Tube should make fitting in reading easier.

What do you think I should be reading next?
Any recommendations?

Goodbye November

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November has been pretty good fun actually. My life has been pretty up and down recently.
But I’ve had good times with friends and family and I’ve learned so much about myself.

I’ve read some great books. ‘Room’ by Emma Donaghue is one of the best books that I have ever read. Plus, here are five things I learned about life by reading Miranda’s book. Hilarious.

I went to the ATP finals at the O2 and watched Andy Murray play live. That was great fun!

I’m now pretty gutted that I’m a Celebrity has finished. It’s one of my favourite shows. Great work by the girls and I just love a bit of Ant and Dec!

I’m back on track with fitness and I’m excited about it. Here’s little Slimspiration for you all! :)

I wrote about a terrible sham event that I went to on Tuesday night. I hope Karma comes back to bite the ‘organisers’ on the a**!

It’s now less than 4 weeks til Christmas! And I’m excited.

Here’s to a fabulous December!

Book Review: Is it just me? by Miranda Hart

Standing in the train station after a particularly stressful week, I needed a laugh and seeing Miranda’s face looking down at me made me think that this would definitely give me what I needed. A simple laugh and a bit of escapism.

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Did it?
Well, there were definitely some laugh-out-loud moments and some not so funny ones, but all in all I would still recommend it. So, in the style of the book I have decided to write a list (Miranda does this a lot).

Five things I loved about this book

1. The fact that there is nothing wrong with dancing around to particularly cheesy songs in your kitchen whilst waiting for the kettle to boil or the toaster to pop. Life is too short.

2. People falling over flat on their face is really funny. Even when you just read about it in a book.

3. This quote: ‘Manicures: Essentially holding hands with a stranger for 45minutes whilst listening to Enya.’ I laughed out loud on a very packed rush-hour London Tube train.

4. Things that seem so huge when you are young appear actually very trivial when you get older. That’s just life.

5. Your life and your career does not have to be one set path. You can start out interested in politics, spend your 20s in office admin and then become a famous TV comedian in your 30s. Miranda did.

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Even if you aren’t a big fan of the Miranda sitcom (on BBC in the UK), you will probably still find this book pretty funny. It is not an autobiography. It is more a collection of Miranda’s observations on life told in own humorous style. It would make a great Christmas present. You can test out the first chapter here for free: Is It Just Me? Free First Chapter

Book Review: A Street Cat named Bob by James Bowen


A Street Cat Named Bob: How One Man and His Cat Found Hope on the Streets

I bought this book after a recommendation on a friend’s blog. It said ‘uplifting, heartwarming tale’ in many reviews and this was exactly the kind of book that I wanted to be reading at the time as a couple of recent reads had been a bit heavy and depressing. And this was definitely the perfect antidote. It isn’t the most lyrical prose but it is a brilliant true story of how one cat managed to enrich the life of a nice guy down on his look. Proof that best friends don’t always have to be human. This book simply made me smile.

Follow me on Goodreads for more book reviews and literary updates.

Book Club: Reading between the wines…

When I moved to London, one of the things on my list was to join a book club. I’d always wanted to be part of one. Then I got the bright idea to start my own. It’s such a great excuse to get together with the girls and enjoy a bit of wine, cheese and gossip. We’re called Between the Wines officially, although we never really refer to ourselves as that. I was inspired by this picture that I found online (Gonereading). We read between the wines, not the lines (ha ha ha, I’m hilarious and extremely original… not).

So far we have read the following books:

Tigers in Red Weather by Liza Klaussman

Fifty Shades of Grey by E L James

The Slap by Christos Tsiolkas

The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller

Have you read any of these?

I always post the books in the sidebar of my blog, so if you are interested in reading along with us, or just eager to see what we’re reading right now, just keep checking back. You can also follow my reading updates at Goodreads.

Are you a member of a book club? What are you reading right now?

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Book Review: On the Island by Tracey Garvis Graves

My Saturday morning reading!

I couldn’t put it down!

Anna is a 30 year old teacher in a dead-end relationship who is escaping for the summer having landed a tutoring job in the Maldives. Her student TJ is 16 and recovering from a bout of cancer. His parents have rented a house in the Maldives and hired Anna to help him catch up with his school friends and avoid being held back a year. Anna and TJ are just about to join the rest of the family when the pilot of their tiny plane has a heart attack mid-air and they plunge into shark-infested waters before washing up on a deserted island. This is a story of how these two learn to live and work together with all of their generational differences in their battle to survive.

When you first read the blurb for this book, you think that it may be just another shipwreck story. I did. The reason I chose to give it a try is because I saw that it is a New York Times bestseller and because it looked to be a light and easy read. However, from the first page I was hooked. I almost missed my stop on the way to and from work, so engrossed was I On the Island. When they were heavily dehydrated, I found myself reaching for the water – that’s a sign of fantastic narrative. I spent all of my Saturday morning anxiously reading in bed, desperately wanting to know what was going to happen whilst at the same time desperately wishing that it didn’t have to end. The two protagonists’ stories are brilliantly created and beautifully intertwined. You find yourself feeling so close to each of them and equally sympathetic to each of their needs, as they struggle with life on a desert island. Every drama, close call, happy moment that they experiences, I experienced it right alongside them.

This is one of the best books that I have ever read. I laughed and cried numerous times and I finished it in a day and a half, which is unheard of with my reading history and busy schedule. I just couldn’t put it down. Please go and read it right now.

P.S. I track all of my reading on Goodreads – join me over there! :)

Bethenny’s SkinnyGirl Rules

This is where I spent my Sunday afternoons

I got into The Real Housewives of New York when I first moved to Costa Rica. I’d heard it was good. I thought that I might like it. I watched a couple of episodes. I was hooked. It was the perfect way to spend a Sunday afternoon during rainy season. Like many people, I fell for the delectable Bethenny Frankel. I followed her throughout the series and into her Bethenny Getting Married? and Bethenny Ever After spinoffs. Whilst in at Las Vegas airport a few months later, I spotted her ‘Naturally Thin’ advice book and had to snap it up. I have never been transformed by a book in such a short period of time. By the time I had landed, I had resolved to change my whole outlook on dieting and healthy living for good. And I haven’t really looked back. These are the rules that I love to live by:

Bethenny’s 10 SkinnyGirl Rules to ‘Unleash your SkinnyGirl and Free Yourself from a

Lifestyle of Dieting.’

1. Your diet is a bank account. Balance what you eat-types of foods and sizes of meals and snacks, good investments, and splurges-so that you never get too much of one thing. Eat what you want to eat. Just recognize what you are eating, and if you know it’s an “expensive” investment, enjoy every bite but have only a couple of bites. Or just recognize that it’s an expensive investment, and balance it later. If you hate to exercise, you eat a little less. If you love to exercise, you can eat a little more. Balance.

2. You can have it all, just not all at once. When it comes to splurges, pick the one you want the most.

3. Taste everything, eat nothing. When faced with a lot of decadent choices, just have a few bites of each. The sum total will equal a meal, but you won’t have overindulged.

4. Pay attention. Never eat while doing something else because you won’t get the satisfaction out of your food, and you’ll be more likely to overeat.

5. Downsize now. Enough with the huge portions. Just have a little of the good stuff, and fill up on high-volume vegetables, soup, and grains.

6. Cancel your membership in the clean plate club. Quit finishing everything on your plate. The fact that it’s there doesn’t mean you have to eat it. Instead, share your food, save it for another meal, or just leave it when it really isn’t very good.

7. Check yourself before you wreck yourself. In other words, stop yourself before you binge.

8. Know thyself. We all have our tendencies, strengths, weaknesses, and preferences. The more you know about yourself, the more successful you’ll be at staying on track.

9. Get real. Real food is always a better investment than processed food.

10. Good for you. Do what’s right for you, what’s healthy for you, what’s good for you. If you don’t take care of yourself, you can’t take care of anything else. Build a firm foundation of good health and self-care, and you can do anything.

(these rules were taken from Bethenny.com)

I thoroughly recommend the book. It’s such a brilliantly, written collection of advice. So simple, yet it needed someone to set it out for you in simple chunks. Buy it, devour it and never diet again. Seriously.