A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder (#1) by Holly Jackson

Published: 2 May 2019 (print)/5th Aug 2021 (audio) Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Farshore/Electric Monkey
Pages: 432/12 hrs and 56 mins
Narrator: Jot Davies, Clare Corbett, Kristin Atherton, Olivia Forrest, Luke Poli
Format: Audiobook
Genre: Young Adult
★   ★   ★   ★  – 4 Stars

The case is closed. Five years ago, schoolgirl Andie Bell was murdered by Sal Singh. The police know he did it. Everyone in town knows he did it.

But having grown up in the same small town that was consumed by the murder, Pippa Fitz-Amobi isn’t so sure. When she chooses the case as the topic for her final year project, she starts to uncover secrets that someone in town desperately wants to stay hidden. And if the real killer is still out there, how far will they go to keep Pip from the truth?

I have been eyeing off this book for years and I finally started reading it and I’m so glad. It is captivating and draws you in fairly quickly and never quite lets go. Who can resist the allure of a possible mistake in a closed case and a town so ready to condemn an apparent murder? The further you go the more doubt is cast. There are hints and clues that don’t connect, the misdirection and hidden secrets from people in town and a cast of characters to keep you guessing.

Jackson has written a story that starts off so simple and yet as each chapter goes on, and Pip gets further information from the people in her tiny village, the stakes are raised and threats come from all sides. I loved the numerous angles and there’s tension and mind games that even as readers you get embroiled in.

As with a lot of things in a small town, secrets are unearthed and things that have been kept hidden come to the surface, affecting more than just one person’s life. It never felt sensationalised, but the knock on effect is clear. Pip’s innocent investigation for a school project never leads her astray from her capabilities, but at the same time her own personality latches on and her consumption of the case and the need for answers brings danger.

Pip is a great character. Her passion and dedication grows from an interest for a school project to something of an obsession as she uncovers more and more secrets and unanswered questions. Her focus and her determination to get to the bottom of this crime is something I think you can achieve with her approach to her investigation, especially as so many people think there has already been a culprit named.

Jackson is great at balancing Pip’s access to information and the reasonable assumption no one would talk to a teenager about certain things. Small town gossip and prejudice is a wonderful tool too and it works in sync with Pip’s perseverance.

Each character felt real too, which is important when creating a community. No one felt one dimensional even the red herrings all had full lives and stories, making them as likely as the next to be suspects. The realness of characters is important too if readers are meant to believe they could hide things, deceive, or have more depth than it first appears. Jackson does this well as everyone Pip interviews, helps, or is hindered by bring their own lives to the page and it is definitely a strength of the book.

I know the book is filled with great formatting around transcripts, emails and Pip’s notes, but I loved the audio version of this so much. It was a mix between an audiobook and a radio drama. The phone conversations sound like phone conversations, the recordings Pip references sound like conversations on tape recordings being played back, and the different voices bring in another great element.

I initially thought it would be a weird, off putting things to have it cut from clear narration to audio that replicated being recorded in a room but it worked remarkably well and helps place you in the scene immediately. It is definitely a bonus instead of having the poor narrators read out transcripts verbatim, having to name each character who speaks before reading their lines for page after page.

It isn’t entirely like a radio drama, there is regular narration as well which help break up Pip’s research and the outside story. It was a clever way to lay out how she was conducting her research and piecing it all together, plus those listening to the book don’t miss out on the creative storytelling Jackson has designed.

I didn’t realise just how long I had been planning to read this until I looked for the sequel and saw there was not one, but two I could get my hands on. So my bad for the delay but it is a seriously good story and one you should definitely pick up if you haven’t.

This is one you should read in order, not only because the second book spoils practically everything from book one fairly soon, but there is something wonderful about seeing Pip’s growth and her determination as she investigates.

You can purchase A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder via the following

QBD | BooktopiaDymocks

WorderyAngus and Robinson | Blackwell’s

 Fishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust | Audible

Long Lost Review: The 143-Storey Treehouse by Andy Griffiths

Long Lost Reviews is a monthly meme created by Ally over at Ally’s Appraisals which is posted on the second Thursday of every month. The aim is to start tackling your review backlog. Whether it’s an in-depth analysis of how it affected your life, one sentence stating that you only remember the ending, or that you have no recollection of reading the book at all. 

Published: 1 October 2021 (print)/19 October 2021 (audio) Goodreads badge
Publisher:
  Pan Macmillan Australia /Macmillan Australia Audio
Pages: 304/ 1 hr and 40 mins
Narrator: Stig Wemyss
Format: Audiobook
Genre: Junior Fiction
★   ★   ★   ★  – 4 Stars

Andy and Terry’s treehouse now has 13 new storeys, including a word-o-matic (it knows every word in the whole world!); a recycling depot; a wrecking ball; a deep, dark cave with a real live, fire-breathing dragon; a too-hard basket; a SUPER BIG STUFF storey; a baked-bean geyser (it erupts on the hour, every hour); a Ye Olde Worlde Historical Village; a fish milkshake level (the penguins love them!); a complaining room; a spooky graveyard (where it’s always midnight, even in the middle of the day); a toffee apple orchard guarded by a kind scarecrow; and a camping ground where you can have a nice, relaxing camping holiday – unless you get caught by hobyahs, put in a bag and poked with a stick, that is … Well, what are you waiting for? Come on up!

As I was organising my review of the 169 Storey Treehouse I realised I skipped reviewing a few of the Treehouse books. I am here to start rectifying that today, I found the lovely notes I wrote when I read it in 2022 so I can at least remember what it was about.

This is Treehouse book number eleven. It doesn’t feel like there have been eleven, each one is fresh and engaging despite being formulaic. They are fun, wacky, humourous, and have unique antics that always seem to make sense in the story even if they make no sense.

Unlike some previous books, there is an actual storyline this time around instead of the plot consisting of jumping through random rooms and floors in the treehouse. There are references to old books and previous levels which doesn’t always happen, and given there are 143 levels it makes sense you could easily reuse a room.

Wemyss does an amazing job once more with the audiobook. It’s always a delight listening to him not only do the narration but also the side dialogue as he describes the illustrations and quirky remarks you miss out on with the audio format. The chatter of the little creatures running around the place are fun to listen to and it fits in well with the overall tone of the story.

I still enjoy the recap at the end of the book as they write down their adventure for their book. I know in the past I disliked the formula sometimes but I like the reliability of it, especially given the middle bits are always so different. I think when the story in the middle is done well, and there is a structure of sorts and isn’t wacky event after wacky event, it’s a better book.

Griffiths makes each book fresh and new and by now we are well aware of Terry and Andy’s dynamic so you know how each character behaves and how they influence a story. It is still easy enough to jump into this series wherever you first find it because they are easily a standalone despite the references to their past works. Story wise it makes no difference which adds to the timeless charm of the series.

You can purchase The 143-Storey Treehouse via the following

QBD | BooktopiaDymocks

 Angus and Robinson | Blackwell’s

 Fishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust | Audible

Holiday Haunts by Imogen Markwell-Tweed and Wendy Dalrymple

Published: 21 November 2021 (print)/21 November 2021 (audio) Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Bryant Street Publishing/Bryant Street Publishing
Pages: 226/4 hrs and 21 mins
Narrator: Jessica Craig, Biff Summers and Faith Connor
Format: Audiobook
Genre: Paranormal Romance
★   ★   ★ – 3 Stars

Christmas is the perfect time of year to fall in love; especially if you’re a specter or a retail employee, that is. At Holiday Falls Mall, love blooms in sweet and spooky ways for four shop employees during the holiday season. This collection features two stories from queer romance writer Imogen Markwell-Tweed, and two stories from sweet romance writer Wendy Dalrymple for a unique, intertwined anthology of paranormal romance novelettes.

 

This collection of queer paranormal stories was one I picked because I was looking for a quick read and being the holiday season I thought what was more perfect, the queer paranormal element was an added bonus and didn’t disappoint.

The focus of these stories, despite the holiday setting, wasn’t actually Christmas stories per se. They were at Christmas, but not about Christmas. Each one was about love, finding love and discovering love, and both authors balanced the sweetness perfectly so it never became saccharine. The paranormal was balanced perfectly too. As a reader there was mystery to tantalise you, unspoken things, little hints and clues that laid traps or meant nothing. Sometimes you were waiting for the reveal, like the first story, Up to Snow Good where I forgot there was a paranormal element I was so caught up in Gemma’s story. Or Heavenly Reads where Markwell-Tweed drops crumb after crumb so we know Something isn’t right, but not sure what.

The stories are short, simple, some certainly more engaging than others but that was a personal choice. With four stories there isn’t going to be a wide range of opinion, I certainly liked some more than others but all were enjoyable and unique. The paranormal elements different than what I was expecting.

You can purchase Holiday Haunts via the following

 BooktopiaDymocks | Blackwell’s

  Amazon | Amazon Aust | Audible

Love, Just In by Natalie Murray

Published: 24 March 2015 (print)/3 Jan 2024 (audio) Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Allen & Unwin/Wavesound from W. F. Howes Ltd
Pages: 464/10 hours, 16 minutes
Narrator: Maddy Withington and Matthew Predny
Format: Audiobook
Genre: Romance
★   ★   ★ – 3 Stars

In the vein of Emily Henry’s You and Me On Vacation, Love, Just In is a friends-to-lovers romance with just enough spice to heat up the summer.

Sydney TV news reporter Josephine “Josie” Larsen is approaching 30 and coming dangerously close to failing at life. Lost in a vortex of other people’s career milestones, engagement parties, and baby showers, Josie is perennially single, abandoned by her globetrotting family, and invisible to her boss – except for the one time he tuned in while she was mid-panic attack on live TV. As a punishment, Josie is shipped off to cover another reporter’s six-month leave at a regional bureau in Newcastle.

But Josie has more waiting for her in Newcastle than yawn-inducing stories about bicycle lane protests. The city is also the domain of Zac Jameson – her best friend since high school. This should be a happy turn of events, but Zac has barely spoken to Josie for the past two years. Not since his fiancée tragically died in his arms in a car accident and he left Sydney to try and cope with his grief.

Now thrown back into each other’s lives, Josie and Zac have to navigate their neglected friendship and secret attraction to each other while struggling with their careers and mental health.

Hilarious, sexy and heart-warming, this is the perfect romcom to sit on the shelves alongside Emily Henry, Sally Thorne and Ali Hazelwood. 

Having loved Murray’s Hearts and Crowns series I was keen to jump into her new book and it was not a disappointment. It is sweet, full of the realities of life, of friendship, and love. Being set in a place that was so familiar to me was a bonus and I loved travelling the streets with Josie as she discovers her new hometown.

There are enough little surprises and twists to keep you engaged. The flashbacks give a nice slow reveal to the relationship between Zac and Josie prior to the present day. It’s a nice mystery element without is being a looming secret, it’s meant to be vague for readers to wonder about without derailing the story unnecessarily.

As it’s already pegged as friends to lovers you know there will be a happily ever after, but it is the journey of the characters and the life around them that is an enjoyable exploration. Zac is a great character and Murray teases him out well as you sense the long time friends turned fractured relationship between Josie and himself.

Josie is an anxious mess, not only about her health, but about her life. Her anxieties about her health as well as her mortification about her career can be debilitating and Murray explores this well through the story. It doesn’t become preachy but there is a fabulous message about trusting yourself, being kind to yourself, and facing your fears.

Withington and Predny do a great job on the audiobook. Withington brings Josie to life with her hopes and her anxieties with great balance. Predny’s role is significantly smaller but it was still nice to see Zac come to life and see his perspective of the story.

While it is a sweet romance story about old friends and new beginnings it is also a story about mental health and looking after yourself, and how easily it can interfere with your life. It’s about not having the dreams you expect and being ok with it, while also having the courage to make new dreams which can be just as good.

You can purchase Love, Just In via the following

QBD | Booktopia

Angus and Robinson | Blackwells

 Fishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust | Audible

Piranhas Don’t Eat Bananas by Aaron Blabey

Published: 1st September 2015Goodreads badge
Publisher:
 Simon and Schuster
Illustrator: Aaron Blabey
Pages: 24
Format: Picture Book
★   ★   ★   ★  – 4 Stars

Everyone knows that piranhas don’t eat bananas — except for Brian. This little fish loves to munch not only on bananas, but on fruit of all kinds Brian’s piranha friends think he’s crazy. Piranhas don’t eat bananas — their sharp teeth are for eating meat And there’s a scrumptious pair of feet dangling in the water nearby…

First up, I adored the illustrations. Who knew you could show so many expressions on a fish. Kudos to Blabey for giving me pure delight just looking at those little green faces.

I had no idea what this book was about before I picked it up, I see so many of Blabey’s picture books with alluring and interesting titles that I add them to my list and vow one day to get there. I am so glad I have finally got there because this book was amazing and so much fun to read.

I loved how enthusiastic the little piranha was about sharing his fruit with his friends, despite being rejected each time because bums and knees are more appetising. Disney’s Tarzan taught me that piranha’s are native to South America so our bums and knees are safe here in Australia unless there is a severe ecological crisis, but I liked how fun the story was about the joys of nibbling on people.

There wasn’t any malice or taunting, this is a fun book about one piranha’s love of fruit but not about the other piranha’s teasing them for the choice. The rhyming was fantastic, the narrative flow got you turning the pages but the rhymes were clever, the dialogue was clever, and the story, while simple, was fun.

The illustrations were brilliant. As I said, the expressions on these little green piranha faces was divine and I liked how they were individuals. Each fish had their own personality and looking at the pictures was as enjoyable as the text, even if the illustrations were simple, they filled the page and complimented the text so well that you don’t even notice.

This might be my favourite Blabey picture book, I loved everything about it, I even loved the little information pages where Blabey with both humour and interesting fact, tells the reader about piranhas as well as bananas and how the two rarely meet, citing both the dangers of banana skins, and the lack of piranha usually feasting on them.

You can purchase Piranhas Don’t Eat Bananas via the following

QBD | Booktopia | Blackwell’s

Dymocks | WorderyAngus and Robinson

 Fishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust

Previous Older Entries Next Newer Entries