Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Top Ten Tuesday: It's a flower!

Welcome to this week's edition of Top Ten Tuesday which is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. This week's theme is Book Covers that Give off Fall Vibes (Or, if you’re not a cover person, share the books in general that feel like Fall.). It is Spring here, so I am choosing to focus on gardens and flowers this week. 






The Lucky Sisters by Rachael Johns - This book isn't even out yet but how could I not include it in a post about flowers on covers!

The Lost Garden by Angela Petch - The title says it all really. This garden is found again in WWII Italy. (my review)

Once Upon  a Thyme by Jane Lovering - This book is set in a herb garden (my review)

The Whisky Widow by Karen Brooks - I love the thistles on the cover of this book (my review)

The Woman Who Got Her Spark Back by Fiona Gibson - The main character of this book runs a plant hospital (my review)



A Secret Garden in Paris by Sophie Beaumont - This books takes it's characters on a walking tour of the gardens of Paris. (my review)

Fresh Water for Flowers by Valerie Perrin - This books features a cemetery caretaker who takes care of the garden and the graves (my review)

Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries by Heather Fawcett - I love the cover on this book! (my review)

The Magic of Provence by Alison Roberts - I like the way the flowers frame the arch on this cover. I am thinking about doing a TTT all about books with arches on the cover. (my review)

The Secrets of the Huon Wren by Claire van Ryn - This cover is so pretty with all the flowers cascading down the cover. (my review)


Have you read any of these books?

Monday, September 29, 2025

This week...




I'm reading


This week I finished listening to Daughters of Batavia by Stefanie Koens. I have long been fascinated by the story of the Dutch ship The Batavia which shipwrecked on the shore of Australia long before the English arrived to claim Australia as their own. This one has 3 narrators, and I didn't love them all, but more about that when I write my review.

I then started I Give You My Body . . .": How I Write Sex Scenes by Diana Gabaldon which was recommended at book retreat earlier this year as being a good resource but also as being highly entertaining. I got this on Audible but it is leaving soon so I need to find some time to listen to it.

I then read The Life She Could Have Lived by Laura Pearson. I really enjoy Laura Pearson's books and this was no exception. It tells the story of one woman's life and how it changes depending on one big decision that she makes. 

Last week I did my TTT post about books I am planning to read in Spring. The Life She Could Have Lived was on the list, but the next book I started, The Phone Book at the End of the World was not. Why do I do this to myself? I finished this one on the plane

One book that was on my list was An Academic Affair by Jodi McAlister. Our read on a theme bookclub theme this month is romance, and this is the book I have chosen for it. I started reading it at the airport last night and I am now about 2/3 of the way through. It's so good! And funny!


I'm watching


Nothing




Life

At the beginning of the year so friends of our move to a town called Port Macquarie which is on the mid north coast of New South Wales and we went to visit them this weekend because it was a public holiday here on Friday so it was a three day weekend.

Neither Robert or had ever been to this part of the country before and we loved it. There are mountains, rivers and the ocean, so much nature. There is sometimes that perception that we all have kangaroos and koalas in our backyards, but they really do as their house backs onto some forest. 

Port Macquarie is VERY koala friendly. Even the electronic speed checks have smiley koalas on them if you are doing the right speed and unhappy koalas if you are speeding. They also have painted koalas all around town. If we were staying in town longer I would have gone and searched for them all. I will post something about 

It is also whale migration season, so we were able to see them at various points. They were far out to sea until we got to the last lookout when they were about 500 metres out to sea but you could clearly see them breaching. It was amazing!

I will post more about this during the week but for now here is a taste of our weekend.







Posts from the last week


Top Ten Tuesday: Books on my Spring 2025 To-Read list
A Winter Wedding Adventure by Leonie Mack
Weekend Cooking: The Whisky Widow by Karen Brooks
Three Mini Reviews for the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge





I've linked this post to It's Monday, what are you reading? as hosted by Book Date, Sunday Salon hosted at Readerbuzz and the Good Book and a Cup of Tea link up hosted at Boondock Ramblings

Sunday, September 28, 2025

Three mini reviews for The Historical Fiction Reading Challenge

Every month when I share the statistics for The Historical Fiction Reading challenge I go around and look at the books that everyone has been reading. In my post I inevitably say I have added several books to my TBR, and today I bring you evidence of that! Two of these books are ones that I learned about through the challenge. 






The Mad Women's Ball by Victoria Mas

Set in 1885 in Paris, The Mad Women's Ball is a short but engrossing read that I thoroughly enjoyed. 

The Mad Women's Ball tells the story of the women of the Salpêtrière Asylum. It wasn't a place that you wanted to find yourself as for most of the year it is a very grim place where the women that no one wants in society are hidden behind the locked doors and high walls. Whilst there were some genuinely mentally disturbed people in the asylum, there are also some women who are there because they dared to defy their families, fell in love with someone inappropriate or behaved in some other non-typical way. 

Eugenie comes from a well to do family, and she should be living a protected, sheltered life but she mistakenly trusts her grandmother with her secret - she can see ghosts. It is the last straw for her father and she is taken to the asylum to be locked up with a diagnosis of hysteria. 

Keeping firm control of the asylum is the Matron, Genevieve. Whilst she is stern, she also does her best to care for the women, especially those who are used as living subjects of Jean-Martin Charcot, a French doctor who is credited with doing ground breaking work about hypnosis and hysteria, although I am not sure he would get away with doing the same living experiments these days

The only time that Eugenie will be seen again is on the occasion of The Mad Women's Ball, an annual event where the patients get the chance to get all dressed up and the brightest lights of Paris come to the ball to watch them dance. 

I heard about this book over at Carpe Librum when Tracey reviewed it here. It's a fascinating read. 

Victoria Mas is a French author and the translator was Frank Wynne. This books counts for the Books in Translation challenge hosted at Introverted Reader.

Rating 4.5/5





The Florence Sisters by Tessa Harris


The idea of packing up and living in Italy for a while has long been attractive. In Florence in 1940 there are a group of British women who live in the city. They are known as the Scorpioni although they prefer to think of themselves of the English Ladies Art Appreciation Society. However, this is a time when the British are at war with Italy and so they find themselves targeted by the authorities.

Angelina is one of the ladies' half English-half Italian nieces, who also happens to be an expert in art, with a particular fascination for the work of Lucas Cranach. When she first meets art dealer, Edoardo Bernini she doesn't like him. She knows that he can't be trusted. After all, his father was convicted of an art related con and Edoardo is working for the fascists.

When he asks her to verify the authenticity of a recently found Cranach painting she knows that if she says that it is genuine it will disappear over the border to Germany, but if she falsely declares it to be a fake she will put the herself and all of the ladies in danger. 

This was my first Tessa Harris and it was an interesting read. I did go down a bit of a rabbit hole regarding the damage done to Venice during WWII and also in looking at the work of Cranach who was an artist that I was unfamiliar with!

I am sharing this review with the New Release Challenge hosted at The Chocolate Lady's Book Reviews.

Rating 4/5






Glorious Exploits by Ferdia Lennon

This is almost a wildcard entry in my reading because it is well and truly outside my normal choices. This book is set in Syracuse in Sicily in the year 412 BC in the days following an unsuccessful Athenian invasion. The Athenians who survived the battle are being held in a disused quarry outside town. The conditions are harsh, the food is scarce and there is no compassion from the locals. After all, these are the men who killed their husbands, brothers and sons. 

Our two main characters, Gelon and Lampo, are unemployed potters, who come across as being a bit dodgy, particularly Lampo who sees himself as a wheeler dealer but money just flows through his fingers like sand. They come up with a scheme to use the prisoners to put on a for one night only production of the latest play by Euripides. The scale of the production gets larger and larger involving more and more of the locals. But the big question is, will the crowd come?

This was such a fun read. Ferdia Lennon is an Irish author who has achieved quite a lot of success with this book, including being shortlisted for the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction in 2025. One of the fun aspects is the language. Lennon chooses to give his main characters Irish voices, using words that are so overtly anachronistic that it doesn't matter. It probably shouldn't work, but it does!

There are, however, serious subjects covered in the book including the impact of war, of love, of redemption and so much more.

I first heard about this book when Cathy from What Cathy Reader Next reviewed it. I was very surprised to find it at my local library, but I am so glad that I got to read it!

Rating 4/5


I am sharing all of these reviews with the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge which I host. 





Saturday, September 27, 2025

Weekend Cooking: The Whisky Widow by Karen Brooks

 


When Greer MacAlister learns her estranged husband has died during the course of his work, she travels to Montrose in Scotland with her young daughter Fen (who is deaf) to claim the widow's payment that is rightfully hers. Her husband was an excise man, and Greer plans to make a new start for Fen and herself using his final pay. However, it turns out that her husband was less than honest, leaving Greer not only penniless with nowhere to go, but suddenly at the mercy of the loc als who immediately turn against her.

Needing a place to go quickly, she attaches herself to a man named Tam Gordon who offers her a job as his housekeeper in the tiny Highland village of Glasglen. Here, the locals, including Tam's eldest daughter, are very distrustful of Greer for many reasons, not least of which is that they believe that the previous housekeeper betrayed them to the excise. It certainly doesn't help that Greer is originally English, that she doesn't speak Gaelic and that she communicates with her daughter using finger talking, a form of early sign language. 

Like so many villages in the Highlands, Glasglen is a town clinging to survival in any way that it can. One of the way that they make ends meet is through the production of whisky and then illegally smuggling it, all the while trying to evade the dreaded excise men and soldiers.

With Tam often out smuggling, Greer is left to hold the fort, and very gradually begins to earn the trust of a few of the locals. Soon, she is learning all about the art of making whisky and, in turn, she and Fen are teaching the locals finger talking, which comes in very handy for hidden communications. She also gets caught up in the lives of the locals, including a mystery of a missing woman.

For all that Tam leads the smuggling operations, at heart he is an honourable man who recognises that Greer is a woman who has faced adversity but still keeps her head high, who is resourceful and who he feels will be an asset to his household and the village.

This book is set in the 1680's which is a time where the whole of Scotland was occupied by the English, and so many people were leaving behind their homes to start again in countries like America because it was no longer possible to survive. The English were tightening the screws on whisky making, so that even the production of whisky for personal use become dangerous and illegal.

Reading this book gave us a fascinating insight into the role of women in whisky making through the ages, which is a subject that the author is clearly passionate about, and is a fairly hidden aspect of history as so much women's history is.

Last year I was in Scotland and this book took me back there to the Highlands, and made me wish we could go back. We didn't actually visit a distillery when we were there, although we did buy this very cool little globe shaped bottle of whisky. 



Karen Brooks is an Australian author I have known about for a while now, and I do own a couple of her other books. Having finally tried one of her books I can't help but wonder why haven't I read any of them previously. Given that this was such an outstanding read which I was fully engrossed in, I plan to read more of her books sooner rather than later.

The Whisky Widow has a gorgeous cover and inside is fascinating history and an absorbing story. Highly recommend!

I am sharing this review with the New Release Challenge hosted at The Chocolate Lady's Book Reviews, with Foodies Read hosted at Based on a True Story and with the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge which I host. 

Rating 5/5


Weekly meals

Saturday - Out for dinner
Sunday - Nothing
Monday - Baked Prawn Nasi Goreng
Tuesday - Chicken Stir Fry
Wednesday - Egg Curry (new)
Thursday - Away
Friday - Away






Weekend Cooking is open to anyone who has any kind of food-related post to share: Book reviews (novel, nonfiction), cookbook reviews, movie reviews, recipes, random thoughts, gadgets, quotations, photographs, restaurant reviews, travel information, or fun food facts. If your post is even vaguely foodie, feel free to grab the button and link up anytime over the weekend. You do not have to post on the weekend. Please link to your specific post, not your blog's home page


Thursday, September 25, 2025

A Winter Wedding Adventure by Leonie Mack

 




I am a big fan of Leonie Mack's writing, and I thoroughly enjoyed the first book in this series, An Italian Wedding Adventure (my review). I always knew that I was going to be keen to read this follow up book. And here's a newsflash....I'm going to read the next book in the series too.

We met Kira in the previous book when she was a co-worker and friend (occasionally with benefits) with Andreas. She has always loved the adventure part of her job, the rock climbing, the skiing and more. What she doesn't love is that her employer has now merged with a wedding planning company. She can't think of anything worse than weddings.

This is especially true when she is assigned to babysit the bride's best friend and guest of honour. Mattia is an Italian opera singer who has sensory issues and a tendency towards misadventure and Kira has been asked to make sure that he makes it to the wedding which is being held at the top of a snow covered mountain on New Years Eve. What could go wrong?

It turns out plenty could go wrong, from transport issues, meddling friends, to ex partners turning up at the wedding, a stressed out bride and nature having her say. Through it all, Kira fights the attraction that she feels to this man who is so different from her, so open to life and yet not overly confident whereas Kira has built walls around herself after her heart was broken years before but no one, not even those she has been closest to over the years, knows that story. 

I really enjoyed the chemistry between Kira and Mattia. He sees her beneath her blue hair and her grumpy exterior (particularly when she is hungry), and she is attentive to him and accepts his sensitivities without judgement. Given who she is, Kira takes a while to come round but when she does fall, she falls hard!

Whilst this book opens at a Christmas market in Salzburg, the events take place in the few days between Christmas and New Year's so it is festive rather than full on Christmassy. It has the trademark Leonie Mack humour and sense of adventure, and is another good read from her!

I am sharing this review with the New Release Challenge hosted at The Chocolate Lady's Book Reviews. Thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for the review copy.

Rating 4/5

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Top Ten Tuesday: Books on my Spring 2025 to-read list

Welcome to this week's edition of Top Ten Tuesday which is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. This week's theme is Books on My Fall 2025 to-Read List

This list is a mix of the review books I have coming up, books I ownf and the library books I currently have on my shelf.]




The Lucky Sisters by Rachael Johns - I always look forward to a new Rachael Johns book. I have booked in to go to a Books in Bars events in October which I am looking forward to.

Christmas on Fifth Avenue by Julie Caplin - If I think about the iconic cities to spend Christmas in New York would be right up there! 

A Family for Christmas in Pelican Crossing by Maggie Christensen - I look forward to each new Pelican Crossing book. I do like seeing Christmas in Australia portrayed in books

Last Stop on the Winter Wonderland Express by Rebecca Raisin - This came out a couple of months ago but I haven't got to it yet. I am looking forward to reading it!

The Tea Planter's Wife by Dinah Jeffries - We are going on holidays to Sri Lanka shortly so I thought I would find some historical fiction to read. 





Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia - It is RIPXX where we read all things spooky and mysterious. I have participated many times over the years but I didn't really have anything that fitted on my TBR shelf. I therefore borrowed this book from the library as it is the readalong book.

The Enlightenment of Bees by Rachel Linden - I recently read my first Rachel Linden book and I loved it, so I have borrowed this one from the library.

An Academic Affair by Jodi McAlister - The theme for my read on a theme book club this month is romance. Whilst I have many, many, many books I could choose for this theme, I am nominating this book.

The Life She Could Have Lived by Laura Pearson - I usually really enjoy Laura Pearson's books and I don't see why this will be any different!

The Chocolate Maker's Wife by Karen Brooks - This is another author that I recently read for the first time and really enjoyed, so I have borrowed this book from the library.




Monday, September 22, 2025

This week....




I'm reading

My European reading continued last week. I mentioned last week that I was reading Daughter of Genoa by Kat Deveraux which is set in Italy (my review), and then I read A French Inheritance by Jennifer Bohnet which I reviewed here.

I then moved away from the Mediterranean to Ireland when I read my first ever book by Claire Keegan, Small Things Like These. This book was only around 120 pages long but it packed a punch. I have already requested another book by this author and I am looking forward to reading more from her.

I now have a bit it of a gap between blog tour books so I can read some of my library books and other review books from some favourite authors, so I am looking forward to a bit of mood reading, or at least a little more freedom!


I'm watching


We went on a date night on Monday night when we went to dinner and a movie...yes...on a Monday! But before you wonder what new release we saw, we actually watched a movie that was released in 1969. The Battle of Britain is my husband's favourite movie but he had never seen it on the big screen and with big sound! I did enjoy seeing it too. I have seen most of it but only in bits so this time I got to watch it from beginning to end without being distracted on my laptop or my phone. 

Here's the trailer




On Thursday night, a couple of friends and I went to hear Jelena Jokic speak. She was actually being interviewed for show called Australian Story and the show will be on TV later this year! We watched her documentary earlier this year and she does have a really inspiring story to tell and is very humble. I look forward to watching the show when it comes out!

Life



We had a really busy birthday weekend this weekend. On Saturday night we attended a really lovely dinner for my friend's 60th birthday. It was such a lovely night, and as a bonus, she had a caricaturist there and we each came home with a drawing. I actually don't mind ours. 

Then on Sunday, we had a family lunch to celebrate my nephew's 18th birthday. I think I am going to have to go back to work for a rest.

In other news, I ended up getting a new laptop this weekend which is exciting. Now I am trying to work out what needs to be transferred from one laptop to the other laptop. I also got a new keyboard and mouse because at least half of the letters are missing off my old keyboard due to overuse!


Posts from the last week


Top Ten Tuesday: That Smells So Good!
Blog Tour: Daughter of Genoa by Kat Deveraux
Blog Tour: A French Inheritance by Jennifer Bohnet
Weekend Cooking: Making Scones
Spell the Month in Books: September



I've linked this post to It's Monday, what are you reading? as hosted by Book Date, Sunday Salon hosted at Readerbuzz and the Good Book and a Cup of Tea link up hosted at Boondock Ramblings

Sunday, September 21, 2025

Spell the Month in Books: September

 








For 2025 I have decided to have a go at Spell the Month in Books which is hosted at Reviews From the Stacks. The link party opens on the first Saturday of the month, but I won't be posting until after that as I already have other things scheduled every Saturday and for the first two Sundays of the month. I will be sharing this post with Sunday Salon hosted at Readerbuzz.

The idea is that you use the titles of books to spell the month name. The theme for September is Something to Savor – longer books (define as you will) OR ones that have been on your TBR for a long time. I am going to do something a bit different from the theme this month. My twist is that I am going to use the concept of long in a few different ways

Let's get started!



S - Song of the Sun God by Shankari Chandran - I chose this one because we are about to visit Sri Lanka. It is a destination that has been on my bucket list for a long time and I am really looking for

E - Emma by Jane Austen - Written so long ago but I still haven't read it

P - Persuasion by Jane Austen - Although I have read both Persuasion and Pride and Prejudice

T - Two for the Dough by Janet Evanovich - I have been keeping a spreadsheet of all of the books I have read for the last 21 years which is a long time! This is the first title that is on my list of books read that starts with T (not counting the ones that begin with the word The)

E - The Endless Forest by Sara Donati - This is the final book in the Into the Wilderness series, which are all long books!




M - Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides - I listened to this so long ago it was on cassette tapes. Funnily enough I got to the last cassette, and it was damaged, so I ended up having to go to the library to read the last few chapters!

B - Bitter Greens by Kate Forsyth - Part historical fiction but also part retelling of Rapunzel fairy tale where she has to let down her long hair

E - The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde - I loved the Jasper Fforde books especially the Thursday Next books, but it has been a long time since I read this author

R - The Red Tent by Anita Diamant - one of the first books I ever reviewed around 20 years ago which is so long ago


October's theme is Trick or Treat – Books that you feel strongly about whether positively or negatively. Should be a bit easier month with the only challenge being two O books that meet the prompt!

Saturday, September 20, 2025

Weekend Cooking: Making scones

A few years ago I listened to a book called The Drifter by Anthea Hodgson. As soon as I heard this passage I knew that I wanted to share it but I ran out of time to do so for that year's International Scone Week. And then we were away last year and then I had other things to post, so that brings us to now. I've been saving the post in draft for so long but today is the day that it sees the light of day!


I have had scones on my mind recently after having lunch with an old boss who told me that she whips up a double batch of scones on a regular basis! I was kind of surprised by that as I didn't picture her as a baker but now she has a bit more time on her hands so I guess that accounts for it. 



In this passage our main character Cate is talking to Henry who is a drifter who is helping her work her aunt's farm




"Anyway, I've gotta go inside and bake as I've never baked before."


"Have you ever baked before?" he asked without looking up.


"Never."


"Shouldn't be too hard then."


She wandered back into the cool of the house and started prepping the kitchen. She'd at least seen Masterchef, and she'd picked up tips from loads of share houses, so she wasn't a bad cook; it just that baking was a specific skill set, and she'd never bothered with it. That's what shops were for. She pulled a copy of The Golden Wattle Cookery Book from the shelf, ignored half the advice, and knocked out a dozen scones in well under an hour. Except they were a bit flat. Wrong flour, maybe. She threw them out and tried again. Burned her hand on the tray getting them out of the oven, accidentally turned off the over, nearly blew her face off when she leaned inside to light it again, then sore loudly and refreshed her cup of coffee while she contemplated her future.


She needed to get this done. The damn cake stall was tomorrow. She thought about packet scones, then decided Kath at the co-op couldn't keep her mouth shut. She stood up and launched her hands into the mixture, rubbing the butter into the flour, adding milk, then kneading like crazy. 


"What are you doing?" Henry had come in to observe her progress, and his large figure was leaning in the doorway, looking aghast.


"Making scones."


Henry pulled her hands off the corpse of dough. "No, you're not. Step away from the dough."


She pulled a face of frustration. She didn't need this. "What?"


"How long have you been kneading this stuff?"


"Ten minutes or so."


"Don't."


"Huh?"


"You don't knead scones. You treat them gently, lightly, softly."


"Yeah, yeah, Nigella - what makes you an expert?"


"I have a mother in Victoria"


"You do?"


"And she's  a good baker. Lots of sons. So I know you don't pummel scones to death. And you cook them quickly in a hot oven."

"Really?"


"Yes."


She was fed up, and threw the dough-pancake into the bin. 


"Okay, you're up.Held me make these damn things or it's going to get embarrassing."


"Why?"


"Because I'm going to cry, and I can tell you  aren't okay with crying women."


He nodded. He washed his hands like a surgeon ready to operate, and pored over the Golden Wattle Cookery Book with her.


"Here, rub the butter and flour together," he said patiently.


She looked unimpressed. "Why not use the mixer?"

"I have no idea. Just do as you're told."


She fixed him with a glare but got rubbing, and found, ultimately, that it wasn't so bad. Henry guided her through the process with the understanding of a cook who had done a bit of baking in his life. She wondered about the woman who had taught him to cook. Did she know where he was now? Was she looking for him? She hated to think of Henry's Victorian mother pining for her boy and not knowing his fate. Henry leaned over and bumped her as he reached for the baking tray.


"Cate? Time to cut the scones out and get them in the oven." He checked the temperature was high.


She picked up the scone cutter and pushed it into the soft dough, then twisted it and brought it back out.


Henry tut-tutted and placed his hand over hers for the next one, his large arm running casually down hers, looking over her shoulder to check her form. "Don't twist it."


"Why not?"


"Not sure. Stops it rising as much?"


He gave off a lot of heat. "Okay."


He kept his hand on hers for a few more scones.  Maybe he thought the technique took practice. Finally, the scones were in, and rising, forming perfect golden scones.


And now I want scones with lashings of jam and cream

Weekly meals

Saturday - 
Sunday -
Monday - Steak egg and chips
Tuesday - Work event
Wednesday - Home made pizza
Thursday - Out for dinner
Friday - Takeaway






Weekend Cooking is open to anyone who has any kind of food-related post to share: Book reviews (novel, nonfiction), cookbook reviews, movie reviews, recipes, random thoughts, gadgets, quotations, photographs, restaurant reviews, travel information, or fun food facts. If your post is even vaguely foodie, feel free to grab the button and link up anytime over the weekend. You do not have to post on the weekend. Please link to your specific post, not your blog's home page

Thursday, September 18, 2025

Blog Tour: A French Inheritance by Jennifer Bohnet

 


Briony has been going through a rough time. She was made redundant shortly after her beloved grandmother has died and her divorce was also finalised on her last day at work. She knows that she is going to have to find a new home and new job in the auction industry soon. 

What she didn't know is that Giselle, her French grandmother, has left her a cottage on the French Riviera and one of Giselle's final wishes was that Briony would give living in the cottage a go. Briony's initial reaction is shock. She was expecting that her mother would inherit the cottage but this isn't possible under French law. And then she thinks that she will sell the cottage, but if there is ever going to be a time when she could try living in France this is it. But first, they need to sort through her grandmother's belongings. When they find an old diary there is also a bit of a mystery to solve.

The cottage is near to a property that is owned by an expat couple, Adam and Lucy. The bought a parcel of land a few years ago and they are slowly building up the business by renovating various outbuildings, and trying their hands at growing grapes for wine making as well as a few other ventures. Also living on the property is Adam's brother Elliot who has just gone through a very public and very bruising divorce. He has just passed the French language test so that he can get back to his career as a vet.

I have enjoyed this author's previous books where a group of people come together at different points in their respective new lives in France (for example in A French Country Escape) and this had a similar focus. Whilst Adam and Lucy love their life it is hard work, and when Lucy decide that she needs a Girl Friday, Briony is happy to take the job for the summer, and she slowly begins to realise that this life in France doesn't need to be just for the summer, and maybe, a chance for a new start in life from all aspects.

I don't really love visiting second hard markets myself, but I did enjoy the fact that Briony's previous role was working in auction houses and the way that she was able to translate that into a new career in France. 

I also appreciated that the story is multi stranded as we get to know Lucy and Adam, Elliot and Briony but also a nice side story featuring Briony's mother, Jeannie. Oh, and there are some animals thrown into the mix as well!

Jennifer Bohnet's books always make me want to visit France again. I do know that I don't have a French grandmother. I recently did a DNA test and I don't have a drop of French blood but if anyone wants to unexpectedly gift me a French cottage on the Riviera, I wouldn't say no! 

I am sharing this review with the New Release Challenge hosted at The Chocolate Lady's Book Reviews. Thanks to the publisher, Rachel's Random Resources and Netgalley for the review copy. Check out the other stops on the blog tour as well!

Rating 4/5




About the Book


A French Inheritance

Every moment is a new beginning on the French Riviera


Five years ago, Adam and Lucy Belgrave took the plunge and bought a sprawling rundown farm in the South of France to bring back to life, much against the advice of Adam’s brother, Elliot.

Today, that dream is becoming a reality and the farm is beginning to thrive and Elliot finds himself grateful for the refuge it provides after his career falters and his marriage fails.

After the death of her beloved granny, a bitter divorce and surprise redundancy - the saying ’sad things come in threes’ resonates with Briony Dymond's life. With her mother by her side, Briony travels to France to learn some news that will change her life completely. Will she have the courage to embrace granny Giselle’s special wishes?

As spring returns to the French Riviera both Elliot and Briony seek to put their pasts behind them and look to find happiness in the future. But can the past give up its hold on the present?


Purchase Link
- https://mybook.to/AFrenchInheritanceBook







About the Author


Jennifer Bohnet is the bestselling author of over 14 women's fiction titles, including Villa of Sun and Secrets and A Riviera Retreat. She is originally from the West Country but now lives in the wilds of rural Brittany, France.



Social Media Links

Facebook: @jenniewriter1

Twitter: @jenniewriter

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Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Blog Tour: Daughter of Genoa by Kat Devereaux

 




Anna relies on the kindness of a select number of people like the banker to help her survive. Other than that, she remains hidden in her apartment with the days running into each other. That's what you have to do when you are a Jewish woman who has lost her husband and whose immediate family has already escaped to America. It's a big change from her previous life where she was a trusted worker in the office of a prominent shipbuilder in Genoa. 

Little did she know but it turns out that things could get worse, when her home is destroyed and she lost what little she had. Left dazed, while she was being comforted, she meets a Jesuit priest. Anna doesn't trust anyone, and certainly does not trust priests but when you have no other options then you have to take a chance.

This is how Anna finds herself hiding in the home of Bernardino and Silvia who are key members of a group that helps Jews escape from Genoa, which is in Northern Italy. Other key members include Father Vittorio, the priest that saved her, and mysterious Mister X. They all face danger as they provide new documents for the Jews who are fleeing the Germans.

Anna, who is using a different identity, uses some of her skills to become useful in helping create the identity cards, often accompanied by the cat. Soon she is spending extended time with both Father Vittorio and Mister X and their friendships and they begin to create a bond. There is, however,  danger in getting close to people when everyone is hiding their true identity and danger lurks around every corner. One unwise word could put the whole organisation at risk, along with the lives of everyone involved

This book really highlights the role of the Catholic church and in particular a group known as DELASEM or the Delegation for the Assistance of Jewish Emigrants, and some of the characters in the book were influential in real life. Several of them were honoured for their work

I really liked that there were several ways that the author connected the story to what was actually happening in Genoa at the time. Before the book even started there was some Essential Information painting the picture of the racial laws that had been enacted before the story in the book started. At the end there was a section called What Happened Next and then What Happened Afterwards. There was also notes on names and sources. 


I am sharing this review with the New Release Challenge hosted at The Chocolate Lady's Book Reviews and with the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge which I host. Thanks to the publisher, Rachel's Random Resources and Netgalley for the review copy. Check out the other stops on the blog tour as well!

Rating 4/5











About the Book



Daughter of Genoa

In Nazi-occupied Italy, keeping secrets could be deadly…


Genoa, 1944:

Widowed and alone, Anna Pastorino has been surviving on her wits since the Germans invaded. The daughter of a prominent Jewish antifascist, Anna lives a hidden life in her small flat near the harbour ... until an RAF bomb destroys her only shelter. When a Jesuit priest approaches her offering help, she has no choice but to accept. She follows her new friend, Father Vittorio, to a safe house above a printers’ shop in a quiet street near via Assarotti.

But the Tipografia Guichard is more than just a refuge. It’s a forgery workshop: a key part of the secret rescue operation headed by Massimo Teglio, the “Scarlet Pimpernel” of Genoa’s persecuted Jewish population. Drawn into a world of clandestine resistance, Anna discovers a new sense of purpose, a circle of friends, and a passion that brings her alive.

Soon, the little flat above the shop holds more secrets than anyone could imagine. As Anna grows closer to both Teglio and Vittorio, she must confront a past trauma of her own: a secret that might endanger her and everyone she loves.


Purchase Link - https://amzn.eu/d/fYISSnd






About the Author

Kat Devereaux was born near Edinburgh, and lived in the United States, Russia, France, Chile, Germany, and the Czech Republic before finally settling in Italy. She is a writer and translator with a special focus on Italian literature.

https://www.katdevereaux.com/

Social Media Links –


Publisher social media handles:

Twitter: https://twitter.com/AriaFiction

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AriaFiction

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/headofzeus/

TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@headofzeus























Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Top Ten Tuesday: That smells so good!

 Welcome to this week's edition of Top Ten Tuesday which is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. This week's theme is Literary/Bookish Candles I’d Make (Pick a book and assign it a fragrance or fragrance combo that would make a nice candle.) (Submitted by Heather @ The Frozen Library)

Originally, I wasn't 100% sure I would do the topic as written but then I remembered that there are plenty of foodie scents that would work in a candle. I have also been meaning to do a foodie books post so I am combining the two! Not all of these books are foodie as such but they do have food items in their title!



The Magic of Lemon Drop Pie by Rachel Linden - I just recently read this and really enjoyed it! The main character, Lolly, makes a lot of Lemon Drop Pie in this book. Think lemon meringue pie with a small twist!

A Faraway Smell of Lemon by Rachel Joyce - This is a short story and the only thing I have read by Rachel Joyce. I do mean to read more as I love the sound of this book. Bonus is that it is set at Christmas and so we can combine the smell of lemon with the smells of Christmas.

A Crown of Bitter Orange by Laura Florand - I love Laura Florand's books so it is a real shame that she isn't publishing any more. They mostly are foodie or about perfumes and set in France. This is the third book in the La Vie en Roses series.

White Mulberry by Rosa Kwan Easton - I read this earlier this year before our trip to Japan and Korea and learnt so much about the history in the 20th century between these two countries. (my review)

Strawberry Shortcake Murder by Joanne Flake - You could use just about any book by in the Hannah Swensen series for this prompt




It was the Pie's Fault by Elizabeth Sa Fleur - This was a super fun romance that I read a while ago now which features fake dating, grumpy/sunshine tropes and delicious sounding cherry pies!

Chai Time at the Cinnamon Gardens by Shankari Chandran - This is a two for one book. Chai and Cinnamon could both be candle flavours right. It is also an excellent read!

Cinnamon and Gunpowder by Eli Brown - I mean if someone likes the smell of gunpowder this could be a two for one too! I started reading this ages ago but other things go in the way and I never finished it! One day I will. 

The Tea Rose by Jennifer Donnelly - My favourite in this trilogy was The Winter Rose but this was a great read too. And another two candle flavours title.

The Full Moon Coffee Shop by Mai Mochizuki - If I am going to do tea then it is only fair that I do coffee too! This was such a fun read when I read it last year. The next book in the series is being released in English next month and I am looking forward to it! (my review)



Do we have any candle flavours in common?



Monday, September 15, 2025

This week


I'm reading

Bongiorno!

My reading over the last week has a very distinct pattern. 

I read The Lost Garden by Angela Petch which is a WWII novel set in Italy, and now I am reading  Daughter of Genoa by Kat Deveraux which is a WWII novel set in Italy. Fortunately, it is different parts of Italy but still. I reviewed The Lost Garden last week and the review for Daughter of Genoa will be up later this week. I do have another review book to read but that is a contemporary novel set in France.


I'm watching


We like to go and watch at least one movie during each of the international film festivals that are held at my favourite movie chain. This time it is the Italian Film Festival which is on, so we went off to seea movie called Diamonds.

It was an interesting movie, almost a movie within a movie. It starts with a producer inviting all of the favourite actresses he has worked with over the year to come for a big lunch where he asks them to read a script. We do come back to this scene a couple of times within the movie. 

All of a sudden it then switches to being the movie from the script which is about a group of women working in a costume makers house where they make the gorgeous and extravagant costumes for movies and theatres. We get to see glimpses of the lives of the women who own the business and the women who work for them. 

It is only at the end that we see why that particular movie within a movie structure is necessary. Here's the trailer






Life


It hasn't been a good weekend for us sporting wise. Well, I say us. Really I mean me.

In Australian Rules Football I am a fan of the Adelaide Crows. This year, my team was flying and finished on top of the league which was amazing given that last year we were 15th. However, on Friday night, they played Hawthorn (which is my husband's team) and we lost. We didn't get to watch the game as we were out watching my nephew play his basketball grand final, which they lost. And then my other nephew lost his football final on Saturday as well. 

It has been a busy week. I had a two day offsite for work which included an evening event, then went to the movies and to watch basketball, I am looking forward to a few nights at home this week. I do feel much more settled now at work than I haved previously.

On Saturday we had a whole group of people around for an open house because my step daughter went back to England on Sunday morning. We will most likely see her again next year, but we will see I guess. It was so lovely having some time with her over the last week. Robert took a couple of days off work so he could take her out to lunch. 


Posts from the last week


Top Ten Tuesday: V is for....
Blog Tour: Winter Nights at the Bay Bookshop
The Briar Club by Kate Quinn
Blog Tour: The Lost Garden by Angela Petch
Afternoon Tea Diaries: Ritz Carlton Melbourne
Historical Fiction Reading Challenge: August statistics


I've linked this post to It's Monday, what are you reading? as hosted by Book Date, Sunday Salon hosted at Readerbuzz and the Good Book and a Cup of Tea link up hosted at Boondock Ramblings

Sunday, September 14, 2025

Historical Fiction Reading Challenge: August statistics

 Every month I share some of the statistics related to the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge. I try very hard to visit every post which has been linked (time permitting) and I find it interesting to see what are the books that people are reading and reviewing! I often end up adding a couple of books to my never ending TBR list.

In terms of the books read in August, there were 69 reviews linked up for the challenge, shared by 20 participants. There were 68 individual titles reviewed, written by 65 different authors, There were 6 reviewers who reviewed 5 or more books each. Thank you to everyone who shared their links whether it be 11 or just 1.

So which books were reviewed more than once in July? There was actually only one this month!



The House at Devil's Neck by Tom Mead is the fourth book in the A Spector Locked-Room Mystery Series and it was reviewed by both Cathy at What Cathy Read Next and Helen from She Reads Novels.

There was only one other author who was read multiple times this month. Kim over at Goodreads is working her way through Laurie R King's Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes series. This month she read four books in the series being The Moor, Justice Hall, The Game and Locked Room. You can check out Kim's Goodreads profile here

If you love historical fiction and reading challenges, it isn't too late to join us! All the details can be found in the sign up post.

I am sharing this with Sunday Salon hosted at Readerbuzz and A Cup of Tea and a Good Book hosted at Boondock Ramblings




Saturday, September 13, 2025

Afternoon Tea Diaries: Ritz-Carlton Melbourne

It's time for another entry in my irregular feature of the Afternoon Tea Diaries. We love a high tea. We don't do them all the time because they are a treat but whenever we do one I like to share about it here. 

This time the location for our Afternoon Tea adventure was at the Ritz-Carlton here in Melbourne. This hotel has only been open a couple of years, and so it is very contemporary and beautifully laid out to make the most of the location, or should I saw the views! 




The setting for our tea was actually in the lobby bar/restaurant of the hotel but the restaurant area is open to both guests of the hotel and the public. The unusual thing about this hotel lobby? It's on the 80th floor of the building so all the hotel rooms are below the reception area. The building itself has no other tall building immediately near it so you end up with expansive views across the city to the bay, to Albert Park, to the mountains. There are windows nearly the whole way around the floor (except for where the kitchen is) so the views really are uninterrupted. 

Once we were seated the server bought over an envelope made from thick paper which had my name on it. Inside was the menu for our feast. It was a lovely touch which I haven't seen done in the same way before and it made us feel like it was a special event right from the outset. 

After a bit of a glitch when we had to send our water glasses back because they were full of floaties, we started with a glass of Moet Chandon and then we were invited to choose our tea from the selection that was available. The way that the tea selection was very neat and appealing although I did find myself having to pick up the actual containers in order to be able to smell the teas so they probably had to come through and tidy it all up again after I had been there. I chose White Rose and Goji tea which was very nice.



The appetiser was a delicious. It was a Spanner Crab Tartlet, Celeriac, Apple and Yarra Valley Gin Caviar that tasted as looked as good as it looked.

For me, the savoury items on the menu were actually the highlights of this afternoon tea experience. They were:

 Yellow Fin Tuna Ceviche, Romesco and Pickled Daikon 

Braised Lamb Shoulder Pithivier, Star Anise and Pomegranate Glaze 

Victorian Crayfish Butter Roll, Finger Lime Crème Fraiche, Celery Leaf 

‘Le Dauphin’ Double Cream Cheese Quiche with Shaved Winter Truffle

In particular, I loved the pithivier which was full of flavour both within the pastry and then with the glaze. Delicious!

The sweets course consisted of 

Apple Tarte Tatin with Cinnamon Cream 

Valrhona 70% Guanaja Dark Chocolate Mousse with Orange Marmalade 

Choux Mont Blanc with Blackberry Compote and Chestnut Cream 

Matcha Mille Feuille with Handpicked Local Victorian Raspberries 


The course that didn't impress me that much were the freshly baked scones which were served with Lavendar Honey Butter, Raspberry Jam and Vanilla Chantilly cream. The plain scones were quite dry and were definitely not light and fluffy, which you can even see in the photo. The fruit scones were better until I put the Lavendar Honey Butter on them. From the taste I thought that it was a savoury butter until I referred back to the menu later. Maybe I should have put less of the butter on the fruit scone. I did, however, really enjoy the warm lemon flavoured madeline, and there was a lovely touch with a chocolate each at the end. 

So, overall, it was a bit of mixed bag for me, especially given that this is probably one of the more expensive afternoon teas in the city. The servers were personable, albeit a bit slow, but they were also attentive enough to move us to a bigger table when one became available which was a postive. I can definitely see us going back to the Ritz Carlton for dinner or even brunch. We might explore some other options around the city before we go back again for high tea though.

One of the highlights of this whole experience was that we went with some friends and I am pretty sure that they will be more than happy to come on more of our Afternoon Tea adventures. We are already talking about when and where to go next!


Weekly meals

Saturday - 
Sunday - Out for dinner
Monday - Italian Meatballs
Tuesday - Out for dinner
Wednesday - Out for dinner
Thursday - Normandy pork and mash
Friday - Take away





Weekend Cooking is open to anyone who has any kind of food-related post to share: Book reviews (novel, nonfiction), cookbook reviews, movie reviews, recipes, random thoughts, gadgets, quotations, photographs, restaurant reviews, travel information, or fun food facts. If your post is even vaguely foodie, feel free to grab the button and link up anytime over the weekend. You do not have to post on the weekend. Please link to your specific post, not your blog's home page
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