Showing posts with label Carol Drinkwater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carol Drinkwater. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Top Ten Tuesday: Books I Have Returned to the Library Unread

 Welcome to this week's edition of Top Ten Tuesday which is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. This week's theme is Books I Wish I Could Read Again for the First Time (This week was originally scheduled to be a non-bookish freebie, but I realized how close it was to the last non-bookish freebie we did. If you’re super on top of it and already wrote your post for this week, post it anyway! If you’d rather do a non-bookish freebie, go for it!). 

I am, however, going rogue this week and I am going to share the last ten books I have returned to the library unread, and I haven't reborrowed .... yet!



The Forgotten Bookshop in Paris by Daisy Woods - I originally requested this one after it was reviewed for the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge. 

Return to the Dallergut Dream Department Store by Miye Lee - I read the first book in this series a while ago

The Midwife of Auschwitz by Anna Stuart - Anna Stuart has been on the French bestseller lists for a while. When I did my Bestsellers Around the World post during Paris in July I decided it was time to try her books. 

Us Against You by Fredrik Backman - I read Beartown and loved it ages ago and fully intend to read the rest of the series.

All the Bees in the Hollow by Lauren Keegan - Lauren Keegan used to be a book blogger and I picked up her book when I saw it next to Claire Keegan's books.



The Ingredients of Love by Nicolas Barreau - This is a French author that I am hoping to read soon.

The Yellow Villa by Amanda Hampson - After reading all of the Tea Ladies mysteries, I am now keen to read the other books by Amanda Hampson.

An Act of Love by Carol Drinkwater - I read my first Carol Drinkwater book during Paris in July this year and now I will read her backlist.  

Emily Wilde's Map of the Other Lands by Heather Fawcett - I read the first book in this trilogy earlier this year

Three by Valerie Perrin - I really enjoyed Fresh Water for Flowers by this author earlier this year


I'll be reborrowing all of these at some point!




Monday, July 21, 2025

This week...




I'm reading


Last week I finished listening to Shakespeare: The Man Who Pays the Rent by Brendan O'Hea and Dame Judi Dench. What a delight hearing many of the stories about her roles, performances, friends, her sense of fun and about Shakespeare and his continuing relevance today! Dame Judi Dench is voiced admirably by Barbara Flynn, but there are some quotes where it is Dame Judi who is speaking, and there is 45 minutes at the end of the audiobook where there is a conversation between the two authors! I don't read a lot of non fiction so it is fantastic when I do and it is so enjoyable!

I then started Corked by Marc Fennell but put it off to one side to listen to The Briar Club by Kate Quinn. I think Corked was actually a podcast but now it has been packaged up and is showing on Goodreads as a book. So far The Briar Club is an excellent audiobook experience but I do kind of wish I was reading it so I can see the recipes that are included throughout the text. I might swap if I can get the book from the library when I go later this week. 

I finished reading Adam & Evie's Matchmaking Tour by Nora Nguyen. I really enjoyed all the places in Vietnam that we visited in the book, and ultimately the romance was satisfying, but it did take a long time!

Then I read a couple of books for Paris in July. I read One Summer in Provence by Carol Drinkwater (review here) and then I read Fresh Water for Flowers by French author Valerie Perrin. This was a very unusual book but I did really enjoy it! My review for this one will be up later in the month.

I then started a couple of things which I wasn't really feeling, but then the library helped me prioritise when I couldn't renew two books so I read the third book in Amanda Hampson's Tea Ladies series, The Deadly Dispute. These books are so much fun and I sped through it in one sitting last night!  I have one other book I need to read in the next couple of days but that will be on the list for next week.   

I did reach my Goodreads reading challenge goal for this year last week! I think I will increase it to 150 books which is basically 2 books a week for the rest of the year.




I'm watching


I went to the movies a couple of times last week. The first one I went to see was Grande Maison Paris which is a Japanese movie about a chef who runs a fine dining restaurant in Paris and is desperate to be awarded a third Michelin star. I have written a review which will be up on the weekend as my Weekend Cooking/Paris in July post. Here's the trailer.






The other movie we went to see was called Number 24. It is a Norwegian movie which is showing as part of the Scandinavian Film Festival. It is about a man who was part of the Norwegian resistance in WWII. It was a really interesting movie. It was structured as the elderly main character giving a speech to a group of students and then flashing back to the things that happened during the war. It was very well done. Here's the trailer.






Life

Not much to talk about here! Fingers crossed I have some exciting news to share soon.


Posts from the last week


Top Ten Tuesday: Honorifics
Paris in July: French-ish songs
Blog Tour: The Village Cafe in the Loire by Gillian Harvey
Blog Tour: One Summer in Provence by Carol Drinkwater
Weekend Cooking/Cook the Books: A Bakery in Paris by Aimie K Runyan
Spell the Month in Books: July 

I've linked this post to It's Monday, what are you reading? as hosted by Book Date and Sunday Salon hosted at Readerbuzz

Friday, July 18, 2025

Blog Tour: One Summer in Provence by Carol Drinkwater

 



Celia Grey's got a pretty good life really. She is a former actress who had a degree of fame in the UK but now lives in the south of France with her writer husband, Dominic and they run a vineyard that Celia inherited from her parents. The vineyard is doing quite well now, after they have worked hard for the last 10 years to bring it back to life. 

However, things haven't always been good. Celia's career was waylaid by a badly reviewed performance in one of her husband's plays whereas his career seems to have bounced back pretty well. She also had some hard times before she met Dominic, times that she hasn't ever even mentioned to him. 

To celebrate, and yes, to drum up prospective business for the vineyard, they decide to throw a huge party. Celia is totally involved in the organisation, to the point of distraction. There's so much to do. The week before the party she is contacted out of the blue by a man claiming to be the son she gave up for adoption many years ago. The son she has never ever mentioned to her husband. On impulse, Celia tells David to come to the party and offers him a place to stay. How on earth is she going to explain this to Dominic, especially when there never seems to be a right time to have any kind of conversation with him.

Then David turns up with someone else, his daughter Gillian, and she and Celia find it very difficult to connect at all. Are David and Gillian truly who they say they are? And can Celia, David and Gillian ever build any kind of relationship after so many years apart?

The author did a great job of really ratcheting up the tension on several layers in this book. There is the tension from hosting such a big event, the tension of suddenly having two people turn up and become part of your life and wondering if they really are who they say they are. Then there are the weather situations in the book, with danger lurking at any moment.

I recently read a book called Adam & Evie's Matchmaking Tour by Nora Nguyen and in the Author Note she says

Books let our imaginations travel where our feet cannot.

and that quote right there sums up why I love to read escapist books like this one. There were scenes in this book where I could feel the Provencal sun on my face, I could see the Mediterranean stretched out before me as I stood on a cliff top, I could smell the lavender and the citrus.  Sometimes, the escapist books I read can feel a bit lightweight, but this one was a much bigger, deeper story and I really enjoyed it. 

I loved the way that Drinkwater wrote about the big events in the book.  The main event of the book is a party where the author described having an alley of trees between which there is a table set with plates and glassware and platters loaded with local food. It's the kind of meal that looks as pretty as a picture and the food sounded absolutely amazing too! I would love to go and have this kind of meal one day, whether it be in the south of France, or just somewhere special near me! But there was also an almost casual party on a beach, where people came together to eat, drink and listen to music.

It was interesting to read all the details about the running of the vineyard, in particular about what happens when there is too much water. It's not something that I have really thought about before!

While I have been aware of Carol Drinkwater as an author, particularly of her Olive series which are memoirs, I had never read her. I am sure I have seen her on a couple of TV shows talking about her expat life living in Provence for many years.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book, and I am so glad that I have finally had the opportunity to read this author! I will definitely be reading more at some point. There is quite a backlist of both fiction and non-fiction for me to read!

I am sharing this review with the New Release Challenge hosted at The Chocolate Lady's Book Reviews, with Foodie Reads hosted at Based on a True Story and with Paris In July hosted by Words and Peace. At 512 pages long, this also counts as a Big Book of Summer. Thanks to the publisher and Random Things Tours for the review copy. Be sure to check out other stops on the tour shown below. 

Rating 4.5/5





About the Book


A season of surprises...

Celia Grey appears to have the perfect life: married to Dominic, the man of her dreams, and living on a glorious, thriving vineyard in the south of France. To celebrate their good fortune, she decides to throw a huge party.

When she is contacted by a stranger who claims to be her long-lost son, David, the newborn she gave up at twenty and has never spoken of since, Celia impulsively invites him for the weekend of celebrations - without mentioning it to her husband.

Despite his surprise, Dominic graciously welcomes David and his unexpected companion - but secretly he harbours doubts. Is David really Celia's son? And who is the mysterious young woman travelling with him?

Only Celia can decide how far she will go to hold everything together, to keep her perfect life from unravelling...

One Summer in Provence is a story of betrayal and belonging, and of discovering love in unexpected places.





About the Author


Carol Drinkwater is a multi-award-winning actress, writer and film-maker, best known for her portrayal of Helen Herriot in the classic BBC television series All Creatures Great and Small. She is the author of twenty-five books, both fiction and non-fiction and including the bestselling Olive Farm memoir series set in the south of France. Her latest TV work is a six-part travel/lifestyle programme commissioned by UK's Channel 5, Carol Drinkwater's Secret Provence. Carol lives with her husband in France.
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