Hot Wheels™ Extreme Action™ Sharkruiser™ by Dr Kathleen Thompson

 

 

 

These days children are exposed to constant stimulation from all angles – such as videos, all-singing-and-dancing toys, soft-play centres, computer games and television. Even my toddler grandson knows how to work an i-pad better than I do.

So how to keep them interested? Well the Hot Wheels Sharkruiser is a good start.

And what is a Sharkruiser? Well it’s a fusion between a fairly angry-looking shark with very large teeth, and a hot wheel car. As you can see from the picture it is bright and attractive.

The first thing kids look for nowadays is ‘the button’ – and the Sharkruiser, certainly has one. Press it and red lights shine from its large shark-mouth and from the cockpit on its back; its jaws start opening and closing and it propels itself backwards and forwards across the floor, chomping noisily as it goes.

Plenty of fun and stimulation there. In fact even Grandma enjoyed playing with it.

It is well-made and robust and the bright blue and orange make it stand out against the other toys.

Children vote with their feet, and my grandson definitely voted ‘Yes’ to this one.

 

 

By Dr K Thompson, author of From Both Ends of the Stethoscope: Getting through breast cancer – by a doctor who knows

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01A7DM42Q http://www.amazon.com/dp/B01A7DM42Q

http://faitobooks.co,uk

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE BUSINESS OF READING: JANE CABLE TAKES A HOLIDAY WITH A FEW GOOD BOOKS

I’ve just been half way around the world on holiday, but visiting Cambodia and Vietnam it actually felt further than that. Intense heat, spicy food, incense drifting from temples and a recent history which shocked and disturbed me. Strange or inevitable then, that my choice of holiday reading was firmly fixed back home in Cornwall.

For a long while I’ve been promising myself I’d read some of Winston Graham’s Poldark novels. I can barely remember the 1970s TV series starring Robin Ellis and I’ve never watched the current BBC dramatization, but I wanted to read the books. And I was entranced to find that they were set exactly in my part of Cornwall, and in the limited gaps between excursions, I devoured the first three.

But the first book I read, at the beginning of the holiday, was Cornish writer Liz Fenwick’s latest and it was anything other than what I was expecting…
Jane Cable’s review of One Cornish Summer by Liz Fenwick.

Book marketing can sometimes be a slightly disingenuous thing. The cover and the blurb promise one thing, but the story inside delivers quite another. Sometimes this can lead to disappointment, but at others the opposite is true. And this is very much the case with Liz Fenwick’s latest novel. It isn’t a light and fluffy holiday read – it’s brilliant and challenging and altogether so much more.

To me it seems a shame that the publisher wasn’t entirely as brave as the author. The blurb describes Hebe as having ‘a life changing diagnosis’ and ‘memories slipping away’, but shies from actually mentioning the ugliness of Alzheimer’s.  From very early on in the book it’s clear Hebe has early onset dementia. And what’s more, she is written in the first person, something only a truly accomplished writer like Fenwick can pull off.

Hebe is every inch a full and rounded character, and one I sorely missed once I’d finished the book. To chart the cruel descent of her illness in such a way as to carry the reader with her must have been a serious challenge and I asked Liz Fenwick why she chose to do so.

“My best friend’s sister has early on-set Alzheimer’s and it has been sitting in the back of my mind waiting for me to find the story to write…in a way so that I could work through my own grief. And that leads into research…first hand, reading a great deal through the various support groups and finally my mother is in the early stages…so although not the same I was living it.”

One Cornish Summer is actually set over the course of a Cornish autumn and winter but the title is not a misnomer, even if the cover image might mislead. Hebe and her niece Lucy’s days in the damp and draughty ‘Hell House’ are contrasted with the former’s memories of a bright and colourful summer just the previous year when she was able to share Cornwall with the love of her life before her memories of it completely dissolved away.

As Hebe’s condition worsens, parts of the book are heart-breaking to read, for example when she answers the door without her trousers on. But there are thoroughly heart-warming parts too, as ‘Hell House’ reveals its secrets and Lucy, at least, is finally able to move forwards. Thought-provoking and ultimately life affirming, One Cornish Summer is an excellent read.

 

Frost Loves LittleLife Backpacks

Children seem to come with a lot of paraphernalia. Even when they are out of nappies and off to nursery. No parent wants to go out without a snack and some crayons. Frost loves the LittleLife Toddler Backpack. Fun and fabulous, they also come with a detachable Parents Safety Rein. The backpacks make your tot feel independent but the reins and the great handle on top give safety. This brilliant backpack is a rather cool unicorn. There are other styles available. Frost recommends.

Unicorn Toddler Backpack. Ideal for both nursery and family days out and about, the Unicorn Toddler Backpack doubles as an approved British Safety Rein, perfect for helping mini-explorers to find their feet.

 

The ultimate choice for unicorn-mad children (and their parents!), the magical new backpack features a pretty rainbow and star pattern paired with a special, sparkly silver horn and fluffy pink wings. Retaining all of the much-loved features usually found in a LittleLife Toddler Backpack, the bag has a 2-litre zipped compartment that can be used to store toys, an extra layer or a snack for days out and about. A name and address label on the interior of the backpack means it is less likely to go astray at pre-school or nursery.

 

Designed to comfortably fit children aged between 1-3, the Unicorn Toddler Backpack features fully adjustable and padded shoulder straps in a striking ice-blue colour. These are combined with a pink chest strap that can be tightened securely to prevent the backpack from slipping off little shoulders. Offering parental security without impacting on your toddler’s newfound independence, the backpack comes with a detachable Parents Safety Rein that transforms the fun bag into a BSEN-approved set of reins.

 

The Safety Rein can be clipped on when greater control is needed, yet detached to allow them to toddle free when desired. For even greater practicality, the backpack has a top grab handle – perfect for balancing children as they learn to walk.

 

For more information about the Unicorn Toddler Backpack visit  www.littlelife.com.

 

Monkey Pop-up Track by Hape

 

hape-pop-up-monkey-track

This little track add-on can be used to extend your original Hape train track or can be played with on its own – which it was – and much fun was had by my testers aged 4 and 18 months. The little one loved the monkeys and happily watched them pop up as the banana train triggered the connectors. She gathered them up and they were quickly handed over to grandpa for a repeat performance. Much laughter and delight followed and it was returned to again and again throughout the day.

hape-pop-up-monkey-track

A bright, fun addition to an already well used track set, sturdy and well finished and beautifully designed for little hands.

Another winner from Hape

Not suitable for children under 18 months

Includes 7 pieces

www.hape.com

Strictly Briks: Dream, Create, Grow

Strictly Briks are Strictly Brilliant. What a fabulous add on to all those building bricks you have in the toybox. Strictly Briks enables children to create multi-storey platforms quickly using the baseplates and Stackers. And we all know how impatient small children are.

The various sets of Strictly Briks allow for plenty of creative play and are a fabulous extension to all of those other branded brick sets that almost all of us have played with at some time or another. Memories of Christmas morning building forts and castles come to mind. Happy Days.

Strictly Briks Trap & Gap™

I was really impressed with the Trap and Gap™ pack – the kids are going to have so much fun with this – Hadley pushing his cars up and down the ramps and Huxley using them as an ark for his animals. Who doesn’t love a trap door! Perfect for wizards and fairy godmothers to appear from.

The Trap and Gap set contains:

Trap and Gap™   Baseplates

Set includes 2 Trap and Gap™ Baseplate 10″ x 10″

2 Stackable Baseplates 10″ x 10″

15 Stackers™

£21.99 at Amazon

Strictly Briks – Brik Tower

The Brik Tower set makes building multi platforms quick and easy. Using the stackers children can soon build a tower – much easier than putting together small bricks to create varying levels on a building. Perfect for castles, garages, houses and any other building your child can imagine.

The Brik Tower set consists of:

12 Baseplates 6″ x 6″ and 80 Stackers™

£24.99 at Amazon

www.strictlybriks.com

Ages 5+

Due to small pieces not suitable for under 3s.

Star Wars – From a certain point of view: reviewed by Chris Donaldson.

 

Long ago, in a galaxy far far…Ok, let’s not do that eh?  The latest book to honour the ever expanding Star Wars universe, does, however, take us back to the beginning – or rather episode 4, which is the first film you saw in 1977.  Bear with me…

Ask yourself then if you can bear to relive the events that started it all for us, but through the eyes and experiences of various minor characters.  For this is what Arrow books would have you do as Star Wars – from a certain point of view comes to a galaxy near you.  Instead of one cohesive narrative, you are presented with no less than forty short stories told from the perspective of different personalities.  Some are peripheral to the main drama (no kidding – the monster from the trash compactor) and others more crucial, such as Grand Moff Tarkin.

Forty different authors tackle this enterprise, some more ably and on tone than others.  The result is a largely successful, sometimes sad, alternative account of the original cosmic fairy tale.  As with all the canon, your enjoyment will depend on whether you embrace the universe or not.  I can see Fanboy’s/girls divided over this.

It is then, what it is, although I might have an interest in seeing the original film again with these backstories rattling around as accompaniment.

Published in paperback by Arrow on 3rd May 2018 – £8.99

Chris Donaldson is the author of Not a Girl: Short tales for Dark days

BUSINESS OF BOOKS: FIRST, LAST, EVERYTHING – NOVELIST SANDRA DANBY

What was the first writing advice you were ever given?

As a young English graduate longing to be a journalist, I chose a bad time to graduate. It was 1982 and publishers were closing their training schemes. Only two courses existed; one at the London College of Printing, the other at Cardiff Journalism School. Out of the blue I received a job offer on a new graduate trainee scheme run by business publisher Benn Publications. It was there in September 1982, sitting around the boardroom table in the impromptu Training Room, that I was given the piece of advice I still remember today and still use. Training editor Val Williams taught us Rudyard Kipling’s quote: “I keep six honest serving men (they taught me all I knew); Their names are What and Why and When And How And Where and Who.” It has stood me in good stead whether writing a news story, a feature, a press release or a novel. And the journalist in Connectedness, Rose Haldane, uses it too when she gets stuck in her research.
What was the most recent writing advice you were given?

That’s easy, it is something that had never occurred to me before until my copy editor pointed it out to me during the editing of Connectedness. It applied to the name of a character, Maud Nettlebed. I realise now I chose Maud’s surname because of a liking for the word, Nettlebed, which goes back to my days as a reporter writing about a furniture company called Brights of Nettlebed. The name stuck. However Dea Parkin, my editor, said it was an unlikely surname that took her attention off the page every time she read it. And that, she said, is a cardinal sin. Avoid anything that distracts the reader from the page, which breaks their concentration, which returns them to the real world, which stops them turning the page and reading another chapter. I guess this is a subjective judgement, but it appeals to the journalist in me who dislikes embellishments and sub-clauses in long sentences. So, I changed Maud’s surname to Nettles.
What is the piece of advice you’d most like to pass on?

Listen to the advice you are given but do not blindly accept it or reject it without consideration. Evaluate it, then adopt or discard it. There is no ultimate template of how you should write, what you should write, the rules you should obey or break. But, and it is a big but, you must listen to the advice and consider it before rejecting it. You must know the rules, before breaking them. You will be a better writer for it. We are bombarded these days with writing advice, never have novelists been so vocal about how they write, when they write, at what time of day. There is no right way and wrong way; there is your way. Be true to yourself. Listen to feedback and suggestions, be polite, be prepared to offer positive feedback and suggestions in return, always give the person giving the advice the respect of considering it. I have participated in many writing classes – as student and teacher – and watched as some students, whose minds were closed to advice, simply did not hear suggestions that could help them. I’ve also watched other students writing copious notes about how their work should be changed and I worry they would subsequently make changes without analysing why. Knowing who you are as a writer, having confidence in what you write, is not easily earned. There is a truth in Malcolm Gladwell’s 10,000 Hour Rule.

 

Novelist Sandra Danby is a proud Yorkshire woman, tennis nut and tea drinker. She believes a walk on the beach will cure most ills. Unlike Rose Haldane, the identity detective in her two novels, Ignoring Gravity and Connectedness, Sandra is not adopted. Follow her on Twitter @SandraDanby

 

How to Work Out What You Want in Your Love Life

In our fast-paced modern world, it’s all too easy for our romantic relationships to be shelved in favour of our careers, our hobbies, and our ambitions, yet there comes a time in most people’s lives where we don’t want to be alone anymore. We want all of the things that we’ve worked for and earned, and we want something else too: that cherry on the top that we call contentment.

On the most basic level, what we wish for is someone who will make us happy. We desire a person that will be the missing piece of our puzzle, making everything better and more beautiful just by being there. Someone who will support us, give us succor, and be as proud of our successes as they are of their own.

Finding that someone is the hard part, of course, which is why we’ve written this article. Helping you to identify exactly what it is that you want and need from a potential partner might just allow you to find that special someone who will give you everything you ever dreamed of…

Think about what made you happy in the past

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Source: Max Pixel

Although lots of us find it hard to pin down what our perfect partner looks like on paper, we often have a better idea of what we want than we realise. One of the best and easiest ways to gain some much-needed clarity is by having a good, long think about what it is that’s made us happiest in the past. Which prior relationships made you the most contented, and what was it about that special someone that made you feel that way? Once you know that, you know what you ought to be looking for in another, whether it’s a hobby in common or just a shared love of cuddling.

Ask yourself why previous relationships didn’t work

In the same way that we can learn from our successes, we can learn from our failures too. Relationships tend to end for a reason, so it’s usually a good idea to avoid dating those who have certain things in common with past partners. Did long distance just not work for you? Then use the search criteria on sites like Badoo to refine your results and find someone closer to home. Struggled to balance professional success with spending enough time with your partner? Then look for someone who has similar priorities when it comes to balancing their career with their commitment to you. Be brutally honest about the mistakes made by both parties and it will be much easier to avoid repeating them in the future.

Make a list

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Source: Max Pixel

We also recommend that you make a list of the qualities you want from a partner. It’s okay to be entirely open with yourself here so, if not liking dogs is a no-no for you, include ‘dog lover’ amongst your criteria. No matter how insignificant or silly your desires might seem, if they’re important to you, they’re going to have an impact on the success of any future relationships, so pop them beside a bullet point. Age, personality traits, and even preferred physical characteristics are all worth noting and should help to make you much more self-aware and successful the next time you try your hand at dating.

What are you waiting for? Work out what you want today and get ready to go for it!