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Showing posts from June, 2016

The Girl of Ink and Stars

The Girl of Ink and Stars by Kiran Millwood Hargrave  Published by Chicken House (UK)   Buy From Waterstones  This is the tale of Isabella, who along with her father lives on the small island of Joya.  Joya is controlled by the wicked Governor who came from across the sea and forbade all to leave, then banished those who resisted his rule away from the town Gromera and put up borders to divide the island.  When, one day, a girl from Isabella's school is murdered, everything in her life begins to change. Chasing after her friend Lupe (the governor's daughter) who runs into the forest to prove she's brave and find the murderer, Isabella gets caught up in the myth and magic of the island and soon finds out that the bed time stories she was told may be closer to the truth than anyone thought.  *****  I was recommended this book by a bookseller friend at Waterstones, with the caveat of it being similar to Philip Pullman's 'Northern Lights&

June Book Wish List

Taking a cue from my friend Emily over at theminimermaid.com , I'm putting together a wish list of books for the month and here it is.... London Belongs to Us by Sarra Manning.  I've loved Sarra's books since I was 13 and I absolutely can't wait to go and buy this! It sounds like the perfect love letter to London, filled with the teenage love and angst that make her books sparkle. Review soon to come no doubt.  Career of Evil by Robert Galbraith (sort of).   I know this has been out a while, but I have to pace myself with crime books as they aren't my go to. Really looking forward to see what Strike does next. The last one, The Silk Worm, was a little bit close to home in the world of Literary Agencies, but I love Rowling's ability to keep me guessing (almost) to the end.  Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo I read Leigh's original series earlier this year and I've been told that Six of Crows packs ever more of a punch! I can't wait. 

Shakespeare's Intimacies

So on Tuesday this week I went to see Romeo and Juliet, as performed by the Kenneth Branagh Theatre Company. It had some amazing cast members - Lily James, Richard Madden and the pure brilliance of Derek Jacobi - and it was really enjoyable! In fact I think I had more of a smile on my face coming out, than I did when I saw Cumberbatch in Hamlet last October. But..I don't think it was the most outstanding piece of theatre I've seen. As a play R+J is performed across the world, in schools, in the West End, in gardens with children and in blockbuster films. And not only is it one of the most well known of Shakespeare's plays but it also inspires many piece of storytelling with its story of love through enmity and its tragic (but terribly romantic) ending.