LinkWithin

Tuesday, December 02, 2025

Top Ten Tuesday: Christmas books that remind me of songs

Welcome to this week's edition of Top Ten Tuesday which is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. This week is a freebie so no set theme. I am choosing to do Christmas books that remind me of songs. The first five are books that I have read (or at least started to read) and the next five are books that remind me of my favourite Christmas songs.




Last Christmas by Clare Swatman - I started this right near Christmas last year but never finished it. I will try again this year because the concept was interesting. 

So This is Christmas by Helen Rolfe - Christmas in Vienna! Yes please! (my review)

Will You Stay Another Day? by Samantha Tonge - I read this book earlier this year. (my review)

Someone Like You by Sandy Barker - This one is set in both London and Seattle! (my review)

A Skye Full of Stars by Sue Moorcroft - This was the second book in the Skye Sisters trilogy set on the Isle of Skye in Scotland (my review)





Let it Snow by Beth Moran - Beth Moran has a lot of books that have Christmassy titles!

How to Make Gravy by Paul Kelly - This might not sound or look very Christmassy but How to Make Gravy is a classic Australian Christmas song. There is even a Gravy Day on December 21 and last year they made a movie of the story in the song. I have included the video below if you want to take a listen.

Driving Home for Christmas by Emma Hannigan - Driving Home for Christmas by Chris Rea is one of my absolute favourites!

All We Want For Christmas by Phillipa Ashley - Phillipa Ashley is another British author who has lots o Christmassy titles

I'll Be Home for Christmas by Linda Lael Miller, Catherine Mulvany, Julie Leto and Roxanne St. Claire  - Another favourite song. This book is an anthology featuring four short stories.


Do you have any books with titles that remind you of Christmas songs? Or favourite Christmas songs that you would love to see as a book title?




Monday, December 01, 2025

This week....


Can you believe it is December already! Before I get into what I have been reading, watching and doing this week, I wanted to mentioned that I will be launching the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge for 2026 on Wednesday! If you love historical fiction, reading challenges or both, please consider joining us!


I'm reading

Last week I finished reading Life Begins at the Cornish Cottage by Kim Nash. I reviewed it last week and I think it is her best book of the ones I have read. I will definitely be reading the next book in the series.

The Kamogawa Food Detectives by Hisashi Kashiwa
i is another series that I really enjoy so I was always going to read the third book, Menu of Happiness. So far, it's making me...happy!

The other book I read this week was Christmas at Hollybush Farm by Jo Thomas, which is set in a struggling farming community in Wales.

I feel like my new normal is to read about 8 or 9 books a month. This month it was 9 book and while I didn't have any 5 star reads, there were 4 books that I gave a rating of 4.5/5 and they are pictured at the top of this post.






Books let our imaginations travel where our feet cannot - Nora Nguyen

Here's where I travelled through books in November

Europe

UK - Dear Mrs Bird, Maame, Life Begins at the Cornish Cottage, Christmas at Hollybush Farm
Ireland - Foster


Asia

Japan - The Healing Hippo of Hinode Park, Letters from the Ginza Shihodo Stationery Shop

Australia

Victoria - The Midwife's Christmas Miracle 

US

Good Spirits 

I'm watching

It's always a good day when the new season of Great British Bake Off starts. I have already watched two episodes and I am now waiting for inspiration to strike so that I can start baking again!

I did watch my first Christmas movie this week, which is a bit of a late start for this year. Fortunately I thought Champagne Problems was a good one, but there was always every likelihood that it was going to be when it is set in France, features a handsome French man and a beautiful chateau in the wine region of France!

We did watch a really interesting documentary series this week. It is called When the War is Over and it is hosted by actor Rachel Griffiths. It looks at the role of art in all it's forms in telling the story of war. The first episode was all about the impact of the movie Gallipolli in telling the story of Aussies in WWI. The second episode focussed on two songs which profoundly impacted the way that Vietnam veterans were viewed after they returned to normal life. The two songs are Khe Sanh by Cold Chisel and Nineteen by Redgum which is a song that quite often makes me cry! It's so poignant. You can watch the video for Nineteen on Youtube.

Other episodes focus on Afghanistan and the role of the official war painter, the role of music in helping prisoners of war cope with their incarceration in Singapore's Changi prison during WWII, and finally the Australian wars which is basically the story of the killings of Aboriginal men and women as the British colonised their lands. 

Here's an intro video about the series




I did also catch 3 episodes of Dish podcast this week on Youtube. It is a show that just brings me so much joy. I watched the episodes with Bob Mortimer, Millie Bobbie Brown and the live show with Jack Whitehall.


Life

We went and enjoyed an afternoon tea with friends yesterday. We have been to the Oxi Tea Rooms before but the menu changes regularly so it was different experience. The menu was called Palete Through Time: Before and so the dishes were inspired by different eras from Ancient Egypt through to Elizabethan era through to now. As usual the food looked spectacular and tasted amazing too. Interestingly, one of the features of this experience was that each dish was accompanied by a different scent. 

The menu actually changes in two days to something completely different, so I will be trying to visit Oxi Tea Rooms again to try that menu!





Posts from the last week

Top Ten Tuesday: The last ten author events I have been to
Blog Tour: Life Begins at the Cornish Cottage by Kim Nash
Weekend Cooking: Eating on Trains
Festive Treats so far....





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

Historical Fiction Reading Challenge: December links


Thank you to everyone who contributed a review in November for the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge. Currently there are nearly 40 links! I will be back in the next week or so with all the statistics for the month. 

Can you believe that it is December already? I certainly can't but even so I have been getting ready to announce the challenge for 2026. The sign up post will be up on Wednesday, and I will also have a post for you to add your wrap up posts for this year's challenge up on Friday.

I am looking forward to reading December reviews and wrap up posts! I am sure there has been a lot of great historical fiction discovered and shared with fellow HF lovers over the course of this year!

If you haven't already signed up, it's probably too late for this year, but if not, the sign up post is here. And I would love to have you join us for next year's challenge. 

Just to recap what participants need to know. At the beginning of each month I will put up a post which will have a Mr Linky embedded into it for you to add your link.

Please remember...

  • add the link(s) of your review(s) including your name and book title to the Mister Linky we’ll be adding to our monthly post (please, do not add your blog link, but the correct address that will guide us directly to your review). 
  • it doesn't matter where you review - Bookstagram, Goodreads etc as long as you share a direct link to your review.
  • any kind of historical fiction is accepted (fantasy, young adult, graphic novels...)
  • if you have time, have a look some of the other links that are present. You never know when you will discover new blogs or books!

You can also join the challenge group on Facebook which you can find here and don't forget to use the #histficreadingchallenge hashtag on the socials.

Let the reading begin!!


Sunday, November 30, 2025

Festive Treats - so far....

 




I feel like I got a really early start on the Christmas books this year, but that I have done a lot less Christmassy things so far, at least compared to last year. Maybe it's because I wasn't working this time last year so I have more time. Or maybe I am just not in a Christmassy mood yet!


August to November


1. Will You Stay Another Day? by Samantha Tonge (my review)

2. Winter Nights at the Bay Bookshop by Jessica Redland (my review)

3. So This is Christmas by Helen Rolfe (my review)

4. Lost Stop on the Winter Wonderland Express by Rebecca Raisin

5. Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan

6. Christmas on Fifth Avenue by Julie Caplin (my review)

7. A Christmas Gift by Sue Moorcroft

8. A Family for Christmas in Pelican Crossing by Maggie Christensen (my review)

9. The Midwife's Christmas Miracle by Fiona McArthur

10. Good Spirits by B K Borison

11. A Christmas Gift by Sue Moorcroft (my review)

12. Life Begins at the Cornish Cottage by Kim Nash (my review)

13. Champagne Problems (movie)

14. Dish with Millie Bobbie Brown (podcast/Youtube series)

15. Christmas at Hollybush Farm by Jo Thomas

Saturday, November 29, 2025

Weekend Cooking: Eating on Trains



It's a bit strange but we have had a spate of eating in trains recently. And no, I am not counting those sneaky bits of chocolate that might get eaten on the commute home!

Our first train meal is the one that we had when we were in Sri Lanka where we had a 7 course dinner in a train carriage at the hotel we stayed at in the tea plantation area. The old train carriage  has been repurposed as an intimate restaurant. There are four booths available in the train so usually they are catering for no more than 8 people and they have thought of everything. You have to present your ticket to enter the carriage, and at the end of the meal your ticket is clipped just like they used to be on trains.

Each course in the menu is named for a train station on the journey between Kandy and Ragala. The carriage is rigged up so that at the beginning of the night it moves around as if the train is going down the tracks. Thankfully they switch it off as you get enough movement as the waiters go in and out of the carriage bring the meals and the drinks. The main waiter is dressed as a conductor and blows whistles and waves flags around at different points in the meal. When the main course comes out it is covered in cloches and the conductor and his assistant come and theatrically removed the cloches crashing them together like cymbals. And the food was really great too! It definitely counts as a memorable meal. I shared more about the food in this meal here



The second train meal was a place that we had been meaning to go for years but had never visited before. In the inner city Melbourne suburb of Collingwood, there are three train carriages that have been put onto the top of a building. I was surprised to learn that only one of the carriages was full length and that the restaurant is only in that carriage. The other two half carriages house things like an art studio. Easey's is a burger restaurant and it was a bit of fun to sit in the same seats that years before would have been used by commuters. There is a big table in the drivers end where the instruments are still present. I don't know that we will visit regularly but it was fun to go just once. My favourite thing was the Brazilian Cheese Balls (Pao De Queijo) which is at the top of the food picture above. The person in the picture is my friend who we went with. It's the best picture to show the seating!





Last weekend we went on our third train meal, and this one does count as a memorable meal. The Q Train is a moving, fine dining restaurant that runs between two small towns on the Bellarine Peninsula. The starting town, Drysdale, is about an hour and a half away from us. We gave this as a present to my brother in law for his 50th birthday back in April but it took us this long to find a date that worked for them (allowing for things like kids sports commitment) and then to find a date when there was availability

Inside the carriages, there are a number of tables, all packed with people looking forward to having an enjoyable meal while the train travels from Drysdale to Queenscliff and back again, with a couple of stops along the way. I am sure that the last stop is probably so that they can pick up the desserts! Most of the food is prepared on the train in the Kitchen car. Interestingly, the same trains are also used for something called Blues Train which features different musicians in each carriage. I wouldn't mind doing that one day.

The food was actually very impressive. The menu was


Spring Basket - with bread, venison kabana and a delicious smoked trout pate

Bannockburn Chicken - Chicken Lyonnaise with chateau potatoes

Fish Cake

Lamb - slow roasted lamb shoulder

Burnt white chocolate and macadamia brownie with smoked olive oil ice cream



This is a family run business based in the area and it is a very popular outing, with weekends in particular often selling out weeks in advance. The ingredients and wines were all locally sourced and each course included native ingredients ranging from finger lime to saltbush ash and pepperberry. The good thing is that the menu changes seasonally so you could go again and have a completely different meal.

My favourite course was the chicken. It was so delicious and moist. That surprises me a little because normally dessert is my favourite. I did enjoy the dessert, but not as much as the other courses. The course that surprised me the most was the Spring Basket which had honey and walnut loaf along with the venison kabana and the smoked trout pate. The venison kabana was very tasty but the smoked trout pate was amazing. We are going to have to try and find the Bellarine Smokehouse when we go down there another time and see what other goodies they have.

I don't believe we have any plans to eat on a train again any time soon, but never say never!

Weekly meals

Saturday - Pork Normandy
Sunday - Grilled cheese on toast
Monday - Smashburgers
Tuesday - Steak and salad
Wednesday - Chicken Parma with chips
Thursday - Pork Nachos
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, November 27, 2025

Blog tour: Life Begins at the Cornish Cottage by Kim Nash

 




Welcome back to Sandpiper Shore. In the first book in the series we met Jo who had just moved to the town as well as her two new friends, Michelle and Emma. The second book in the series is Emma's story!

Emma is a widow who lives on the same property as her friends Jo and Michelle. She is actively involved in the community as an organiser for the Lonely Hearts Club, which helps her fill her days and brings together lonely members of the community for different activities. She has no interest in meeting someone new, although her friends are trying to convince her that she is still young enough.

One day Emma is talking to the local vicar and his wife, and finds herself roped into organising a pantomime to raise funds for the local air ambulance. Back in her youth, she had been rehearsing for a version of Romeo and Juliet where she was Juliet when her heart was broken by her Romeo, a boy called Tom. Unable to face him, Emma became involved in the activities behind the scenes and loved it while someone else took the role of Juliet!

Complicating matters, that same boy has recently moved into the local area and is encouraged by his daughter to join the pantomime company. Tom went on to marry the girl who replaced Emma. Now a widower, he has returned from his life in Australia and is looking to settle into the community. And the chemistry between the two is still there! (Oh, yes it is!)

Emma now has a lot to do in a very short time from writing the script (which is inspired by Cinderalla), finding her cast, organising costumes, the stage sets, ticket sales and so much more. She doesn't have time to be distracted. And when her leading lady makes it clear that she has eyes for Tom, Emma can't face the idea that history might repeat itself. But what if Emma doesn't know the whole story of what happened all those years ago? Would that change things for her now?

This book has a cracking start which made me smile from the opening paragraph:


Two years ago I lost two things. One was my husband. The other was myself. I must be really careless because as if that wasn't enough, while out for lunch one day with my friends, I also lost my dignity.


And the enjoyment continued all the way through the book. I particularly enjoyed getting to know Emma as she started to recognise that she has allowed herself to be shaped by her husband and has tended to ignore her own needs. Now, though, that can change as she realises that she can live life on her own terms, even if that is from the simplest thing like not making sure the cushions on the couch are perfectly lined up. 

The pantomime performance is front and centre of the whole story (oh yes it is!) and I loved a couple of the character's performances in particular, but you will have to read the book to find out who they are! The pantomime is very much associated with a British Christmas season. A couple of years ago I went to a pantomime that was put on by a community theatre group in Perth and it was a lot of fun! I was so tempted to put in way more pantomime lines like "It's behind you. Oh no it isn't! Oh, yes it is" in my post. I feel I was very constrained by only including two! 

I have read quite a few of Kim Nash's books set in Cornwall, and I think this is her best yet! Bring on the next one. 

I am sharing this review with the New Release Challenge hosted at The Chocolate Lady's Book Reviews. The blog tour for this book is a collaboration between three different tour organisers so thanks to the publisher for the review copy and Rachel's Random Resourced, Random Things Tours and Compulsive Readers Blog Tours for the opportunity to take part in this bumper blog tour! Check out the other stops on the blog tour as well!

Rating 4.5/5


 








About the book



When life gives you heartbreak , sometimes it also gives you a second chance… 

When Tom Sullivan returns to the quiet village of Sandpiper Shore, Emma can hardly believe her eyes. She hasn’t seen him since they played Romeo and Juliet in their school play – a lifetime ago, before real heartbreak, and long before she ever imagined life as a widow.

The last thing she wants is to relive the past, especially with someone who once made her teenage heart flutter. But when Emma agrees to put on a charity pantomime to raise money for the air ambulance service that helped her late husband, she’s thrown firmly back into Tom’s path.

As rehearsals begin and the local community rallies around her, Emma finds unexpected joy in bringing people together – and a surprising connection with Tom that feels far too real to ignore. Maybe it’s time for Emma to become the leading lady in her own life, not just for the show, but for herself.

Full of warmth, humour and heart, this is a story about letting go and discovering that it’s never too late to take a chance on love.

 




About the author


 



Kim Nash is the bestselling author of uplifting, heartwarming, romantic, feel-good fiction. She has wanted to write books since she was a little girl. Her other dream, is to live in a home that has a view of a golden sandy beach and the sea sparkling in the sunlight. Until that dream comes true, she’ll continue to write second chance romances about women who live or move to the seaside on her behalf. She is published by Boldwood Books.

One of her greatest writing achievements is to be nominated for the Kindle Storyteller Award in 2020, and she was delighted when Claudia Winkleman had read her book and said it was 'Totally warm and absolutely lovely.'

She lives in Staffordshire with her son Ollie and English Setter rescue dog Roni, is Author Community Director for publisher Bookouture (a division of Hachette UK) and, as an avid reader, started her career in the publishing industry as a book blogger.

When she's not working or writing, Kim can be found walking her dog at Cannock Chase, reading and binge-watching TV. She's also quite partial to a spa day, lemon drizzle cake and a gin and tonic (not all at the same time!)

Kim also runs a book club in Staffordshire and organises local and national reader/author events.

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Top Ten Tuesday: Last 10 Author Events I Have Been To!

Welcome to this week's edition of Top Ten Tuesday which is hosted by That Artsy Reader GirlThis week the theme is Thanksgiving/Thankful Freebie. It took me a little while to think of something, but I got there in the end.

I am very lucky and yes, thankful, to live in a city with a very active book scene. There are always events on. Some times they are big named authors who attract a crowd of thousands, and sometimes it is a small event at a local library with just a handful of people. Then there are multiple festivals in various country towns and suburban areas. Sometimes I know lots of people in the room and other times not. One thing you do know when you go to an author event is that if nothing else you can talk about books! 

My post this week is the last ten author events I have been too. Usually if I attend an event I will buy the book and get it signed. Sometimes there are goodies, sometimes tasty treats, but the events are always fun!



Holly Brunbauuer - Just last week Bree from All the Books I Can Read went to our local library to hear this author talk about her debut novel, What Did I Miss? It was a very interactive session!

Rachael Johns (twice) - A couple of weeks ago I went to see Rachael Johns talk about The Lucky Sisters (my review) both at my even localler local library and then to a Books in Bars events in a regional city about an hour away from me.

Helen Goh - This was an event in the city where we not only got to listen to the conversation but also got to try some of the recipes from her latest cookbook, Baking and the Meaning of Life.

Steph Vizard - It was standing room only at this event which was the launch of her latest book,  A Smart Girl's Guide to Second Chances

January Gilchrist - By contrast, this was a very intimate conversation about January Gilchrist's debut novel,  The Final Chapter, which was held in what is in effect a sales office at a new residential development. This night was so much fun because it was such a small gathering! I took a friend with me who had never been to an author event before.





Madeleine Cleary and Anne Freeman - This was a fun night where these two authors spoke about their two books which both feature sex workers. One was set in 1850s Melbourne, The Butterfly Women (my review) and the other is a modern story about an online sex worker, Me That You See.

Emma Mugglestone - This launch for In the Long Run was held in a bar around half an hour or so away from me. There was even a delicious cocktail!

Alli Sinclair - This was a drive up the highway for an hour or so to an event in Ballarat to hear Alli Sinclair talk about her new book, A Woman's Voice.

Joanne Miller (The Eights), Chloe Adams (The Occupation) and Michelle See-Toh (Jade and Emerald) - This was an event held in a library about half an hour away from me, and featured three debut authors from Penguin. 

Alli Parker - This was a fun launch for Until the Red Leave Fall. It was held in a super cool bar. The mood was set with 1950s music and the crowd was buzzing! And there were these super cute cupcakes

Wow, that has surprised me. That only takes me back to the end of July this year. Oh, and I just realised I missed one too! Sorry Christine Newel! I suspect that there will be only one more event this year which I am going to on Thursday, but bring on next year, when it will start all over again!




Monday, November 24, 2025

This week


I'm reading

It's November and the best of 2025 lists are coming out. It always bemuses me a little bit because there are still 5 weeks of year left and I still might not have read my best book of year yet! The other thing that I am always left wondering at the end of the year is what have I been reading. I have read some really great books this year, and have read more 5 star books this year than I have in the the two previous years combined. However, when I look at all the best of lists, I haven't read any of them!


I finished three books this week. The first was Letters from the Ginza Shihodo Stationery Shop by Kenji Ueda. This is another of the Japanese book which have a number of stories that are really only linked by location and theme. In this case, the location was a stationery shop. I loved all the talk of pens and notebooks and the like, but I am not sure this one worked completely for me.

By contrast, I loved  Good Spirits by B K Borison and started telling my friend to read it when I had only read the first chapter. It was so much fun and I am really looking forward to the second book of the series coming out in the second half of next year.

I was trying to get through my library books which I can't extend again, and so I picked up Foster by Claire Keegan. This is such a small book, less than 100 pages, but Keegan definitely knows how to tell a great story, about not a lot, in very few words! I am already looking forward to reading more from her.

I am currently reading Kim Nash's Life Begins at the Cornish Cottage and I am having so much fun with it! The main character is producing a pantomime which is very British Christmas to me. My review for this one will be up in the next few days for the blog tour.




I thought I had gone to my last author event for the year but it turns out I have two more in me. Last week I went to see Holly Brunbauuer talk about her book What Did I Miss? at my old library system. It's funny because the branch we went to is at the major shopping centre in the area but I had never been in the branch before even though it's been open for years! I have another library event this week  and then maybe that will be it for the year. Maybe!


I'm watching



We went to the movies on Saturday night to see The Choral which is showing as part of the British Film Festival. The movie stars Ralph Fiennes as a choirmaster who is recruited to lead the choir of a Yorkshire town. He's a controversial choice because he has spent a lot of time in Germany. It also follows the lives of some of the younger people in the village who face the inevitability of being sent to the War and the impact of the conflict on life.  It was a really lovely movie! If you've read either of the last two books by Helena Simonson you might enjoy this! Here's the trailer:





Life


We went to a lovely lunch with my sister and brother in law on a moving restaurant called Q Train. It was yet another meal on a train, although as far as I know that is the last one for the year.





We moved into this house 3 years ago. It was built new so there wasn't anything major to be done but there were still projects. This week, my lovely, handy husband finished building a deck by our front door. We upcycled the wood from my sister's old deck and it came up a treat! Now to the next two, much bigger projects. 



Posts from the last week

Top Ten Tuesday: Classics I Haven't Read
The Lucky Sisters by Rachael Johns
Dear Mrs Bird by A J Pearce
Cook the Books: Maame by Jessica George
Spell the Month in Books: November




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
TEMPLATE CREATED BY PRETTYWILDTHINGS