The Big Five-0 By Jane Wenham-Jones | Book Review

the big five O , book, book review, Jane Wenham-Jones

I was very excited to receive this book. It has a great cover and looks like fun. The fact it is about women turning fifty also made me happy. Older women are underrepresented in books in my opinion.

The book itself is fantastic. Every character is well-written and interesting. The story keeps you entertained and guessing. This is an enjoyable read that totally engrosses you into the story. Jane Wenham-Jones is clearly a master of her craft. This book is just perfect. I hope it gets made into a film. 

Four friends are planning a joint 50th party the seaside town of Broadstairs will never forget, but these 49 year olds have far more on their minds than canapés and balloons for their half-century.

Empty-nester Charlotte wants to know what her husband’s up to.

Single mother Roz fears her teenage daughter will discover how she pays the bills.

Tough businesswoman Fay crows about her no-strings toy boy but hides the real story behind her divorce.

Singleton Sherie’s cat is the only male in her life who ever stays around. Or is he?

They’re all keeping secrets but as the big birthday looms, the beans are about to spill. As the shocks come out, one of them is going to need her friends more than ever.

Is fifty the new thirty? Today’s fifty-somethings lead very different lives from fifty-something women even one generation ago. Jane Wenham-Jones writes with insight and humour about the challenges today’s mid-lifers are grappling with – relationship wobbles or break ups, making ends meet, juggling the demands of offspring and elderly parents, health scares and the minefield of finding love.

All of Jane’s books feature issues she has faced – and life has a way of reflecting fiction, too. Several times she has found herself dealing with serious issues soon after she’s started writing about them.

Jane’s characters meet their own problems head-on in this very funny and relatable book.

The Big Five-0 by Jane Wenham-Jones, published 19 September 2019 by HarperImpulse, paperback, £8.99.

Jane Wenham-Jones is a well-known author and journalist who regularly appears on radio and TV. She has written for a wide variety of magazines and newspapers, is a regular columnist for Woman’s Weekly and the agony aunt for Writing Magazine.

She has published six novels: Raising The Roof, Perfect Alibis, One Glass Is Never Enough, Prime Time, Mum in the Middle and The Big Five-0, as well as three non-fiction books – Wannabe a Writer? and Wannabe a Writer We’ve Heard Of? plus a humorous diet book, 100 Ways to Fight the Flab and Still Have Wine and Chocolate.

Jane also works the after-dinner circuit, talks to writers groups and conferences, and has worked as a celebrity speaker for P&O. She has hosted the Romantic Novelists’ Association’s Romantic Novel Awards – the annual awards for the best in Romantic Fiction – for the last nine years, and presented hundreds of events at literary and book festivals in the UK and abroad. Jane lives with her family in Broadstairs, Kent, where three of her novels are set.

The Big Five-0 By Jane Wenham-Jones is available here

HarperImpulse, 19 September 2019,  paperback, £8.99

The Escape Act – A Holocaust Memoir UK Tour: 23rd September – 29th October 2019

Image credit: Asaf Sagi

The spectacular true story of how a Jewish acrobat escaped the Nazis by running away to join the circus!
Based on the true story of Irene Danner-Storm, The Escape Act – A Holocaust Memoir tells the riveting and powerful story of a Jewish acrobat who hid in a German circus during WWII to escape the concentration camps. Hard-hitting and inspiring, this historically researched and poignant onewoman theatre and puppetry production embarks on a UK tour this autumn.
The production follows Irene’s journey from Kristallnacht in 1938 to liberation in 1945, and her all too risky escape to the circus. It’s the story of how she fell in love and started her own family, all under the protection of the Althoff Circus. It is about the immense kindness shown towards Irene by the non-Jews who risked their lives to save her and inspects the devastating impact of the Holocaust on individuals and families who were torn apart.
The performance flits from past to present as it simultaneously examines Irene’s life under the Third Reich and the experiences of writer and performer Stav Meishar growing up a grandchild to Holocaust survivors. As Meishar tells Irene’s story it triggers her own memories of family stories, and she is compelled to face the past traumas and struggles of their history.

Image credit: David Konecny

A multi-faceted performance combining theatre, circus and puppetry, the performance is a
culmination of seven years of research into the lives of German-Jewish circus families between 1929- 1945. Using collected testimonies and interviewed witnesses, the production is brought to life by Meishar in an effort to document and commemorate the Jewish legacies.
Creator and Performer Stav Meishar comments, I felt compelled to make this work of historical circus-theatre in light of the current climate. With statistics showing 1 in 20 Britons disbelieving that the Holocaust happened …’

In addition, the tour is accompanied by a public talk about the history of Circus Jews in Europe
Between the World Wars; interactive circus and drama workshops for all ages; audience Q&As; and
more, which are all available to book in advance.

The Escape Act is produced by Dreamcoat Experience and Petite Mort Productions, and supported by
Arts Council England, The European Cultural Association, TelepART and The Puffin Foundation.
Title The Escape Act – A Holocaust Memoir
Running time 75 minutes
Box Office Tickets are available from individual theatre box offices.
Twitter #TheEscapeActShow
Guidance Suitable for ages 10+ (Viewer discretion advised)
Performance Dates
23rd -24th September Jackson’s Lane
269a Archway Road, London, N6 5AA

Home


26th September Circomedia
Portland Square, Bristol BS2 8SJ, UK

Home


26th – 27th October CircusMASH
2 Vicarage Road, Kings Heath, Birmingham, B14 7RA
https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/4311021
29th October The Lowry
Pier 8, The Quays, Salford M50 3AZ
https://thelowry.com/

The Day we Meet Again by Miranda Dickinson reviewed by Natalie Jayne Peeke


Phoebe is getting ready to go on the trip of a lifetime, a year long journey across Europe. She’s having second thoughts…..again , even her friends don’t think she will go . When she arrives at St Pancras station she is met with a delay with no end in sight . This has to be a sign that she’s not meant to go, right ? Then she meets Sam .

Sam is leaving London for a year and is going back to the small island of his childhood to find out what he can about his father who abandoned his family when Sam was young . It’s a trip that Sam knows he has to take , doesn’t he ? Then he meets Phoebe.

I am not a romantic, I do not believe in love at first sight, I do not believe that you can fall in love with someone just hours after meeting them. Call me cynical if you must .

So naturally I tend to stay away from the romance section. However I decided to give ‘The day we meet again’ a go. What attracted me to it was the fact that it was different from other ‘Boy meets girl’ books. Phoebe and Sam meet just as they are about to go on year long trips.

They spend a few hours with each other, talking , laughing and discussing what they have in store for the next twelve months. Their trains are ready to leave so they make a promise to each other that if they both still feel the same they will meet again in exactly one year.

I loved the fact that it’s written from both Sam and Phoebe’s point of view. I felt like I was enjoying coffee and sunshine in paris with Phoebe one moment and the next I was on a windy little island with Sam.

A beautiful story of adventure, taking risks, friendship and of course – love.  

The Day we Meet Again  by Miranda Dickinson  paperback £7.99

Review: Natalie Jayne Peeke www.thebookwormmother.co.uk

My Writing Process – Ruthie Lewis

Ruthie Lewis is the latest author in the series How I Write, which gives readers, and other writers, an insight into the minds of writers. Not only how they think, but how they work. However, this is a writing process with a twist because A.J. MacKenzie and Ruthie Lewis are pen names for the husband-and-wife writing team of Marilyn Livingstone and Morgen Witzel. They also write non-fiction under their own names. 

 

We grew up in Canada, where we met at the University of Victoria. We come from quite different backgrounds. Marilyn grew up in towns and city suburbs in Ontario and British Columbia, whilst Morgen’s parents lived in the wilds of northern British Columbia. Same country – two hugely different lifestyles! We married nearly 40 years ago and had a long honeymoon in Europe. Back in Canada, Morgen did his MA in Renaissance history, while Marilyn waited until we had moved to the UK to continue her studies at University of London (MA in medieval studies) and the Queen’s University of Belfast (PhD in medieval economic history).

After moving to the UK we lived for a year in London, thirteen years in rural Kent and for the past nineteen years in very rural west Devon. Marilyn is a keen singer and musician and occasional composer, an A-level examiner and governor of a group of primary and secondary schools, Morgen tries never to miss Test Match Special, teaches at business schools and works as a Fellow of the Royal Literary Fund. He is also a trustee of two local charities.

Morgen has written books on management history, leadership and ethics. Marilyn’s solo writing has been academic book chapters, articles and reviews about the agricultural economy of early 14th century England. Our first joint work was The Road to Crécy: the invasion of France in 1346 (2004) followed by The Black Prince and the Capture of a King, Poitiers 1356 (2018). Our A.J. MacKenzie novel was The Body on the Doorstep published by Zaffre in 2015, the first of three historical crime novels set in Romney Marsh during the smuggling era and the French Revolution (the others The Body in the Ice and The Body in the Boat). A J MacKenzie has another series set during the War of 1812 in Canada, published by Canelo (The Ballad of John MacLea, The Hunt for the North Star and forthcoming Invasion). Our first Ruthie Lewis novel, The Orphans of Bell Lane came out in August 2019 and is our first foray into historical sagas.

The Orphans of Bell Lane has a place dear to our hearts as some of the situations and locations are based on family history. It has been wonderful to bring that to life. We also love the Hardcastle and Chaytor mysteries, and hope to return to them soon.

Our writing process

It may be because there are two of us, but so far no two books have developed in quite the same way. This is partly for practical reasons; the person with the most free time will take on necessary jobs. For our first non-fiction work we wrote in the same room, sorting through the original sources with one of us keying in text. Otherwise, sometimes, we each write individual chapters or groups of chapters and then edit each other’s work to create a unified voice. Sometimes one person takes on the first draft and the other does a strong edit to ensure continuity of language, tone, voice and so on. Often one of us will have a very strong idea for a particular chapter and want to write that.

One thing that is important for all of our fiction is the final read through of the final draft. We do this in our sitting room, in facing armchairs, with a draft on our laptops and we read the book out to each other. One of us is responsible for making changes on the master text. The presence of at least one cat is crucial to this process, although we keep the dog out as he is still young and wants to play. (His role as editorial assistant is crucial as he gets us out to walk each day; walking is great for plot development too!)

Planner or Pantser?

We are very much planners. We spend longer on planning, character development, location research, plot development etc than we do on actual drafting. We find this a most enjoyable part of writing and we often do it out of our offices: on Dartmoor, on the beach, lazing in a garden in France, sometimes during long car journeys. Our planning document can take as much as a quarter the length of the eventual novel. We spend a lot of time on the background and back stories of our characters and we have full descriptions of the main character, not just what they look like, but how they move and sound, and how they think. This helps a great deal when writing dialogue.

Structure?

We start with a rough story arc followed by a basic chapter structure. We then develop a more detailed chapter outline guides the initial draft. And, we always have a sequel or series in mind as we write.

What do you find hard about writing?

One of us finds settling to writing more difficult and will procrastinate before starting, the other dives straight in. Mostly, though, the hardest thing is carving out enough time to do it…

What do you love about writing?

One of us particularly loves the character development part of the process, while plotting is the favourite bit of the other (not going to tell you which is which!)

Advice for other writers.

Try to write something every day, no matter how short. It is easy to drift and find that you have not written for days, and that makes it much harder to get back into it. The other piece of advice is that walking is a great aid to planning and plotting, and will often help to clear a log-jam that seemed insurmountable.

The Orphans of Bell Lane by Ruthie Lewis. Published by Zaffre, 22nd August 2019, Paperback, eBook and audio.

 

Elastoplast ‘s latest Plasters featuring famous characters – what’s not to like?

These  arrived on my desk, and having seen my two year old grandchild running full pelt, before tripping, I thought it a great idea.

Pic

 

Take a look at Elastoplast’s,  the UK’s leading plaster brand,  new range of ‘PAW Patrol’ plasters which feature all famous characters from the hit animated pre-school series – Chase, Skye, Marshall, Rubble, Zuma, Rocky and Everest. Elastoplast children’s plasters are especially developed for the sensitive skin of children. The plasters are dirt and water resistant. They are very skin friendly and easy to remove..

But don’t forget to put Elastoplast Wound Spray into your rescue pack. This cleans and prepares the wound. Apart from anything else,  the tot will be so fascinated tears will be forgotten.

Then the plaster, best not to stretch, and heavens – no creases.

Then Elastoplast also have healing cream which you might consider applying.

Almost worth coming a cropper.

Nickelodeon PAW Patrol Plasters: RRSP: £2.90*

 

 

Setting Your Own Terms When Playing Popular Casino Games

Travelling to destinations which are popular for their nightlife and casinos is a dream for many people. On many occasions, people from around the world take long trips to places such as Las Vegas in order to live the ultimate casino experience. This experience normally includes placing bets on Blackjack and Roulette tables, playing slot games, testing your skills on a poker table or trying your luck at Craps.

For those that find travelling to such a destination harder than others, there is always the alternative of playing these games at an online casino, such as www.mansioncasino.com. Although being in a real casino gives players the opportunity to interact with the surrounding environment, there are a lot of people who prefer to simply focus on the game while playing from the comfort of their own home. By accessing a casino website, casino fans can enjoy playing popular themed slot machines and other games. Even though the action takes place via a laptop or a mobile device, the casino experience is not compromised.

Simple Interface and Responsive Design

Online casino companies are aware that their customer base consists of many different types of people. A casino player can be both somebody who is very technical and who regularly uses the Internet to access websites or somebody who would not be considered very technical. This is why casino website developers focus on creating user friendly designs, which adapt to all screens, software and hardware in general. It is highly unlikely that in 2020 a casino website will not be responsive.

Starting with the homepage and moving on to pages such as the registration page or the customer’s profile page, every page perfectly adapts to any device or browser. For those who prefer using mobile phones or tablets in order to play, there is always the option of downloading an online casino’s application.

Benefits of Using Online Casinos to Play

It is true that real casinos can provide a truly entertaining experience to their visitors, as apart from the opportunity to play, visitors can also enjoy numerous shows and activities. On the other hand, there are certain rewards that only online casinos can provide. Most online casinos welcome their new players with welcome promotions. These promotions come in the form of bonus funds or free spins.

Another important aspect of playing online is that the user can access the casino whenever and from wherever he or she wants. However, although the above seems risky in terms of overdoing it with playing casino games, casino websites give players the tools to set their own limits. This decreases the risk of losing control and playing too much.

Types of Casino Games You Can Find Online

Online casinos have hundreds of slot games, tens of table casino games such as Roulette and Blackjack, other games based on chance and of course video poker. Most online casino players enjoy playing slots because of the game’s fast paced nature but there are those that try their chances on a Roulette table. An online casino product that is quickly gaining a faithful audience is live casino. In this section of the casino website, players have the opportunity to play live against the dealers of the world’s most popular table games.

 

Sponsored Post

FINALLY, A GIG MADE FOR THE GRAM

Live music is the best. The sound systems, lights, energy of the crowd and seeing your favourite artists in the flesh. But it’s always a challenge to capture the best shots for your Instagram channel, right? Well, not at the launch of Samsung KX.

 

This week, London’s new experience space for culture and innovation launched with a bang by hosting the world’s first vertical staged gig – fit for Instagram stories. Based on research that shows 94% of phone users capture content vertically and 79% find vertical content the most interesting, Samsung KX wanted to provide Londoners with the ultimate shareable gig experience.

Mabel performed to crowds of 2,000 across Coal Drops Yard to celebrate the new Samsung inspiration hub officially opening its doors.

 

Celebrating 50 years of innovation by showcasing a glimpse into how we could live in the future, the new space offers guests a taste of a fully connected lifestyle with a range of experiences featuring cutting-edge technology.

 

So, is this a taste of how gigs will be in the future? We hope so because, let’s be honest, our Instagram feeds certainly need it!

Elevator pitch Linwood Barclay – reviewed by Natalie Jayne Peeke

 

 

 

Barbara Matheson; a journalist, a critic of the Mayor of New York.

Richard Headley; the mayor, with a past he is ashamed of.

Jerry Bourque,; a NYPD detective is at the scene of a gruesome homicide

One freak elevator accident =  tragedy, two = problem, three = chaos.

So let’s recap: Monday morning in a Manhattan office tower, four people enter an elevator, press the buttons and watch in confusion as the elevator passes their floors, rising, rising without stopping. proceeding straight to the top and then – the lift falls right to the bottom.

An awful tragedy but then it happens again and then again. One of the most vertical cities in the world is plunged into chaos.

People refuse to leave their homes. Many men and women working in offices are left fearing for their lives.

Why is this happening? Who is terrorizing the people of New York? In a race to find the answers the lives of Barbara, Richard and Jerry are changed forever

Just as the film “Jaws” left us not wanting to dip a toe in the ocean, Elevator Pitch will leave you wanting to take the stairs from now on. Fast moving and packed full of suspense I could not read quickly enough. I was shocked at many points throughout the book and just when I knew who the culprit was, and why they did it and how, the genius that is Linwood Barclay delivered one more surprising revelation.

I enjoyed the many different characters, and easily followed the various threads. In particular I enjoyed the fact that there are chapters that are  written from the future witness’s point of view. Each character is unique and as a reader you can relate to at least one of them.

You will be left guessing until the very end but will relish every moment of it.

Elevator Pitch Harper Collins Hardback – £20 eBook – £9.99 Audio download – £12.99

Natalie Jayne Peeke: http://www.thebookwormmother.co.uk