The Room by the Lake by Emma Dibdin

 

Caitlin never meant to stay so long. But it’s strange how this place warps time. Out here, in the middle of nowhere, it’s easy to forget about the world outside.

It all happened so fast. She was lonely, broke, about to give up. Then she met Jake and he took her to his ‘family’: a close-knit community living by the lake. Each day she says she’ll leave but each night she’s back around their campfire. Staring into the flames. Reciting in chorus that she is nothing without them.

But something inside her won’t let go. A whisper that knows this isn’t right. Knows there is danger lurking in that quiet room down by the lake…

 

Most of us have wanted to do this at one time or another, haven’t we? When life got too stressful and there didn’t seem to be any way you could find a happy ending. So what if we could  pack a bag, buy a ticket to anywhere and disappear until we sorted ourselves out? Caitlin doesn’t just think about it, she acts on it and sets off for New York.

Dibdin gives the reader a sense of the desolation and confusion Caitlin feels after the loss of her mother as she wanders the streets of Manhattan, filling the endless hours, and introduces Jake who takes advantage of her vulnerability and whisks her off to the Lake House to meet his family. Except the reality of his family was not what Caitlin had imagined.

We immediately get a strong sense of Caitlin’s fragile mental state that leads to her making the choices she does – it is all so  plausible, and as we read we are unsettled by a growing unease that all is not as it seems.

A gripping thriller that explores how vulnerable we can all be given the circumstances and how easily it is to fall prey to false appearances.

The Room by the Lake RRP £7.99

 

Emma-dibdin

AUTHOR

Emma Dibdin grew up in Oxford, and now lives in New York. She is a writer and journalist whose work has appeared in Esquire, Marie Claire, Harper’s Bazaar, Cosmopolitan, and Total Film. This is her first novel.

 

Urban Veda – Natural Skincare

 

Feeling a bit grey after January? You are not alone. Gosh, last month was grim but I’ve found something that soothes and comforts the spirit as well as skin. Are you up for balancing your dosha? Then perhaps a little Urban Veda will bring you the balance you crave.

The Urban Veda ranges are designed to be suited to different skin care types which in the principles of Ayurvedic medicine are associated with ‘doshas’. This is the Ayurvedic term to describe the physical and emotional tendencies in our mind and body. There are three doshas – Pitta, Kapha and Vata. If you pop over to the site you’ll find a simple online questionnaire to discover your dosha and select the products in the range that are most suitable. The ranges are Purifying, Soothing, Reviving and Radiance.

Naturally formulated using Ayurvedic herbs, flowers and fruits, combined with multi-vitamins and clinically proven actives, Urban Veda helps to maintain skin’s natural balance by infusing it with Omega-rich bio-oils, free radical-fighting antioxidants and vitality-boosting essential fatty acids.

 

I’ve been testing Radiance Replenishing Night Cream and let me tell you, it’s far too lovely to save for night time. I keep it on my desk and when I’m feeling under pressure I stop and rub some on my hands as well as my face. The rich, warm smell is so calming that I instantly feel better. The light cream is easily absorbed by the skin and is enriched with anti-inflammatory turmeric to improve skin tone, liquorice to support elasticity and restore suppleness, arjuna to reduce the appearance of fine lines and patchouli to reduce scarring and heal dry and inflamed skin. It’s ideal for skin prone to becoming dry, lack-lustre and dull. Yes, that’s me with my hand up scoring a perfect ten on all counts.

Naturally formulated to Ayurvedic principles to balance the Vata dosha.

No parabens   No SLS  No GM ingredients

£19.99 from Boots    www.boots.com

Check out the full range at www.urbanveda.com

 

Hummingbird by Tristan Hughes

 

 

Hummingbird by Tristan Hughes is out now and is the winner of the Edward Stanford Travel Writing Awards 2018, in the category for Fiction, with a Sense of Place.

 

“What you could change and alter could never be finished or complete or dead. This is what I had been told back then, and what I had tried very hard to believe in since.”

Beside a lake in the northern Canadian wilderness, fifteen year old Zachary Tayler lives a lonely and isolated life with his father. His only neighbours are a leech trapper, an eccentric millionaire, and an expert in snow. But then one summer the enigmatic and shape-shifting Eva Spiller arrives in search of the remains of her parents and together they embark on a strange and disconcerting journey of discovery. Nothing at Sitting Down Lake is quite as it seems. The forest hides ruins and mysteries; the past can never be fully understood. And as Zach and Eva make their way through this haunted landscape, they move ever closer towards an acceptance of what in the end is lost and what can truly be found.

 

You beautifully evoke the Canadian wilderness in Hummingbird. I felt the need to reach for another sweater as I read it.  Is Sitting Down Lake based on a real place or a blending of many?

The name is fictional, but it is based on a real place: a remote lake in the wilderness outside the small town of Atikokan (which appears as Crooked River in the novel) in northern Ontario.  My grandparents had a log cabin there where we’d spend our summers as a family when I was child.  It’s very much as it appears in the novel, with the bay and the islands and the railroad tracks.  When my grandparents first went to the lake, there was no other way of reaching it except by canoe or by hitching a ride in the caboose of a passing train (there were no scheduled stops and only a few trains ever went by), although these days there’s a dirt logging road that takes you close.  My family still has the cabin and I return there whenever I can.  Oddly enough, I wrote the majority of Hummingbird in a rickety old fishing shack on another, relatively nearby, lake, and would often visit by road or boat (or across the ice by snowmobile in the winter).

The characters in the book reflect and reinforce the sense of place. To what extent do you think we are shaped by our surroundings?

I think places are a bit like pets sometimes – if we spend enough time in them, we begin to take on some of their characteristics.  Also, we do tend to be drawn to – and to fall in love with – places that reflect us in some way, that speak to some part of our personality and perhaps magnify it.  And it works the other way around too: we shape our surroundings by how we see them and how we imagine them.  People overlay landscapes with stories and folklore, with songs and pictures, with their hopes and fears and desires, and all of that becomes part of the landscape too.  It’s how we come to inhabit places and make them our homes.

The landscape is bleak and stark but imbued with its own beauty. Having lived in both Canada and Anglesey do you think the isolation afforded by such landscapes has shaped your writing?

In some ways I think it has.  I’ve spent so much time immersed in those landscapes – with my hands in the dirt, so to speak – that they’ve become part of my creative DNA.  They were also the landscapes of my childhood, and those places tend to have a special power or resonance for us.  When I was young, they were my playground and my schoolroom; where I learnt how to see the world and how to imagine it.  I was outside a lot, and quite often alone, and as I wandered around exploring I’d make up stories and the landscape was part of them.   Looking back, I can see that these places have always been characters in my writing because they were ever-present characters in my life.  And like the best characters, they have many layers; they are stark and rugged and beautiful, full of histories that lie just beneath the surface, predictable and then unpredictable by turns.  I’m constantly discovering something new and surprising in what I thought was familiar, like in a long and successful love affair.  And it’s not always easy either.  My father is a farmer and growing up on a farm I learnt that the beauty of a landscape can be hard and tough and unforgiving sometimes; they are places of work as well as contemplation.  And I also learnt that there was danger lurking in those landscapes: you could slip through the ice; you could go missing; you could freeze to death.   And you had to respect that, because however much you love them they never really belong to you.

Humingbird-Tristan-Hughes

I understand that Hummingbird was inspired by a book you wrote when you were nine years old. Of the four short stories contained within it what made you revisit this particular story?

It was.  About three years ago my mother was rummaging through the attic when she found what I guess was my first book.  It was made up of twenty handwritten pages, clumsily stapled together between two pieces of cardboard, with the catchy title ‘Four Stories’.  A mouse had eaten most of the top left corner.  Most of the stories were about aliens taking over my primary school, and dinosaurs, and finding a chest of gold in a cave.  But the last, and the longest, of them was about a man who walks into the wilderness of northern Canada and never returns.  That one was based on a true story.  About a hundred years ago, my great uncle wandered off into the forests of northern Ontario and didn’t come back.  They never found a body.  There was a set of footprints leading to the shore of a remote lake, and then … nothing.  It was as though he had stepped off the face of the earth.  Looking at those awkwardly scribbled pages, I could see how my nine-year-old self simply couldn’t comprehend that somebody could just disappear.  The story must have haunted and bewildered me.  There were no miraculous discoveries, no remarkable interventions from spaceships, no dream to wake up from.  In some ways, the shakily handwritten words were an attempt to follow those footprints into a world I was too young to properly understand – a darker world of loss and grief.

After reading the story as an adult, I began to imagine a character living in this remote and lonely place, trying to deal with the sheer incomprehensibility of sudden loss, and it slowly began to turn into the novel.  I think sometimes we are drawn back to those moments when we first realise something, even though we don’t yet quite understand it.  And maybe that is where stories begin – as footsteps guiding us into the unknown.

There is much of the silent understanding between the male characters in the book and then along comes Eva who starts asking questions and talking about things. Do you think there is a clear difference between the way males and females deal with life events? Eva’s need to find answers and Zach’s acceptance of what he has been told?

In some ways Hummingbird is about the doomed efforts of the characters to submerge memory, to freeze time.  They are trying to protect themselves from the past by not speaking about it, by attempting to insulate themselves in silence.  But Eva brings a more active, questing energy to the community at Sitting Down Lake and begins to challenge that reticence.  The novel is trying to ask what happens when the ice thaws?  what exists beneath the snow? And Eva is the catalyst for this, the character who brings all these things to the surface.  There is something about her bravery and forthrightness – her desire to confront the past – that offers the other characters a kind of redemption or route towards reconciliation, a way to properly face what they have tried to hide from.   So, I don’t know if there is any intrinsic difference, but I would say that although Eva is the same age as Zach, I think in many ways she is much more mature than him.  She is also less of a passive observer – she is not prepared to let things be.

Tristan Hughes was born in northern Ontario and brought up on the Welsh island of Ynys Mon. He is the author of three novels, Eye Lake, Revenant, and Send My Cold Bones Home, as well as a collection of short stories, The Tower. He is a winner of the Rhys Davies Short Story Prize and is currently a senior lecturer in Creative Writing at Cardiff University.

 

Lola Makeup by Perse – Review by Talia Lee-Skudder

 

LOLA Makeup by Perse is the luxurious yet affordable cosmetics brand and the official make up partner for top TV show ‘Britain’s Next Top Model’ presented by Abbey Clancy. Each week the wannabe models would have their faces painted using LOLA products, showing the versatile looks that can be created with a combination of the different cosmetics available.

 

I was sent a number of their products to try out including the piel perfecta primer, the concealer pen, a matte long lasting lipstick and the ultra high shine gloss. The products are all packaged in slick matte black boxes with white writing, creating a high-end illusion that the products are much more expensive than they really are. With prices as low as £5.95 we can all own a little bit of luxury without breaking the bank.

 

The piel perfecta illuminating primer is a mineral infused base using diamond luminescence. I loved this primer, it was super light and a little product really goes a long away. It creates a glowy and brighter complexion and is fab for when your skin needs a little pick me up but you don’t want to layer on the foundation. It is also perfect worn under foundation, giving your skin that luminescent look whilst also providing the ideal canvas on which to apply foundation. Following the tips on the back of the tube, I also used the primer as a highlighter and was pleasantly surprised. It gave my skin a natural glow that is sometimes difficult to achieve with heavier liquid based products and powder highlighters. I loved this product, as the weather gets warmer it will be my go-to primer for creating that summery-glowy look with a product that does not make my face feel like it is caked in make up.

The concealer pen, similar to the consistency of the primer, was incredibly light and blendable. Again the serum is illuminating and instantly adds a touch of youthful radiance. This is the perfect product for light everyday colour coverage. If you have dark circles under your eyes and you prefer a heavier coverage, then you can use this product as a liquid highlighter on the tops of your cheekbones and on your brow bones. Alternatively, if you’re a fan of contouring then this product is great for highlighting the bridge of your nose and the middle of your forehead.

Next is the matte lipstick in colour Merry Berry. This too comes in slick, black matte packaging. Initially the colour in the tube appears to be a deep red, however on application it becomes clear that it is a berry colour with more of a pink tone as opposed to red. The colour is long-lasting but if you are looking for a dramatic lip then I would advise applying two layers of the colour. I wore the lipstick all night and with only a few top-ups the colour remained as vibrant as when I first applied it.

Finally, my favourite, the ultra high shine gloss in clear. I am not a huge lip gloss fan and usually prefer a matte lip but I think this product may have just converted me. I love that this gloss can be worn over any lip colour to vamp up your make up look. The gloss truly makes your lips appear more volumised and seductive due to the conditioning active vitamin complex. Worn on top of your lipstick the gloss really emphasises the cupids bow and creates the illusion of a plumped up pout and does not require frequent reapplication to maintain its glossiness. The ultra high shine lip-gloss is now a staple in my cosmetics bag.

 

From foundation primer to false eyelashes and nail polish, LOLA caters to every make up related desire. Head over to their website at www.lolamakeup.com to check out the huge range of products they have on offer. You will not be disappointed!

 

The Edward Stanford Travel Writing Awards  Announce 2018 Shortlist 

Edward Standford Travel Writing

The Edward Stanford Travel Writing Awards, in association with luxury tailor made travel specialist Hayes & Jarvis, has announced its shortlist for 2018. The Awards celebrate the best travel writing and travel writers in the world.

With 43 titles whisking readers to over 150 countries across seven categories, these awards celebrate both multi-award-winning authors and inspirational debuts from over 15 countries. These awards recognise the escapist, ingenious and inspirational qualities of travel writing in all its forms, including fiction, nonfiction and memoir, children’s books, cookery books illustrated adult nonfiction and Travel blogs.

The award categories are:

  • Stanford Dolman Travel Book of the Year, in partnership with The Authors’ Club
  • Hayes & Jarvis Fiction, with a Sense of Place
  • Wanderlust Adventure Travel Book of the Year
  • Food and Travel Magazine Travel Cookery Book of the Year
  • Destinations Show Photography & Illustrated Travel Book of the Year
  • Marco Polo Outstanding General Travel Themed Book of the Year
  • London Book Fair Children’s Travel Book of the Year
  • Bradt Travel Guides New Travel Writer of the Year
  • Lonely Planet Pathfinders Travel Blog of the Year

In addition to the above, the awards also include the Outstanding Contribution to Travel Writing award.  Six of these categories are open to a public vote which, combined with the judges’ verdict, will determine the 2018 winners. These include: Fiction, with a Sense of Place, Adventure Travel Book of the Year, Travel Cookery Book of the Year, Illustrated & Photography Travel Book of the Year, Outstanding Travel Themed Book of the Year and Children’s Travel Book of the Year. Readers can cast their vote here edwardstanfordawards.com/vote, and two voters will be in with the chance to win a set of 10 travel books.

The winners will be announced at a star-studded dinner on 1st February 2018 during the Stanfords Travel Writers Festival at Destinations: The Holiday and Travel Show at Olympia.

The winner of the Stanford Dolman Travel Book of the Year (in partnership with The Authors’ Club) receives £5,000 and all winners receive an antique globe trophy, to be presented at the awards ceremony.

The first Edward Stanford Award for Outstanding Contribution to Travel Writing was awarded to Bill Bryson and last year the award was presented to Michael Palin by Levison Wood who also won an award for his book Walking the Himalayas.

The full shortlist can be found at www.edwardstanfordawards.com

Olaf’s Frozen Adventure Snacktime Surprise Toy

Snacking Olaf is one of the new range of toys inspired by the new Walt Disney Animation Studios mini movie Olaf’s Frozen Adventure. Olaf teams up with Sven on a merry mission. It’s the first festive season since the gates reopened and Anna and Elsa  host a celebration for all of Arendelle. When the townspeople unexpectedly leave early to enjoy their individual festive customs, the sisters realise they have no family traditions of their own. So, Olaf sets out to comb the kingdom to bring home the best traditions and save this first Christmas for his friends.

 

After a long day of snowy adventures,Olaf needs a snack. He tries to enjoy the holiday treats like his friends but they just keep sliding right out. Oh, if only I could do the same – all those treats and no calories. Little ones will have fun pretending to feed him. Who wouldn’t with that smiley face.

Press one of his ‘coal’ buttons and he makes funny noises and utters simple phrases.

Best of all batteries are included, so no hunting for a shop that might be open on Christmas Day.

 

The Disney Store £26.99

 

Tumball

It wouldn’t be Christmas without at least one new game to add to the family collection – and one that all the family can play. Apart from the old favourites – Scrabble, Monopoly, etc, I’m always on the lookout for something that the little ones can join in with and this year Tumball hits the spot.

It does say for ages 5+ and I did wonder whether it would be a bit too difficult for the 3 & 4 year olds but with help from Uncle Anthony they soon grasped the technique.

Coloured balls are suspended from a hanger and each player has a white stick and an equal amount of white plastic balls, each with a hole in them. The object of the game is to place the white balls onto the coloured ball platform using the white stick. One false move, too may balls and the platform parts and white balls cascade into the tray below. It’s a game of dexterity and balance.

Tumball

The prize goes to the one who has no balls left but the littlies loved it when the balls clattered down into the tray and thought they were wining in style. And who were we to tell them otherwise.

Easy to assemble and easy to play. After all, once dinner is over and the sherry has been served you want to relax and have fun. Anything too complicated will have to wait.

 

Tumball £17.99 

 

Organix Goodies Christmas Selection Box

Organix Goodies Christmas Selection Box

A selection box for the Christmas stocking has always been a must in our house. It never matters what else is in there, there just has to be that bulky box of chocolate from Santa. I forget how many Christmas mornings have gone by with chocolate for breakfast – and if you can’t have an indulgent Christmas morning what’s the fun?

But what about the toddlers in your life? You don’t want to fill them full of sugar and neither do you want them to miss out on all the fun. That’s why the Organix Goodies is the perfect stocking filler.

Organix’s ‘no junk’ promise of always organic and nothing unnecessary in their products makes this a perfect treat.

Inside the cheerful box you’ll find five Organix products especially tailored to the little one in your life Organic mini gingerbread men biscuits, apple and strawberry fruit shapes, alphabet biscuits, apple and raspberry soft oaty bars and apple and orange soft oaty bars

Organix Goodies Christmas selection box

Organix Goodies Christmas Selection Box

Suitable for 12+ months

RRP: £2.99 and available from www.boots.com