Ah, the glorious days of summer are upon us! Which is why I've been hiding indoors, listening to the audiobook version of '21st Century Yokel' by music journalist and writer Tom Cox. Well, you don't want me getting sunburnt, do you?
Released by the innovative, crowd-fund publisher Unbound, '21st Century Yokel' is as genre-defying as it is lovely. Part-memoir, part-travel book and part ode to the British landscape, it meanders through tales of creatures and countryside, family and folklore to weave a charming narrative that you just want to wrap yourself up in. Cox uses gorgeous, lyrical language to capture the important places, pets and people in his life with humour and optimism. From his native Nottinghamshire, via Devon, Derbyshire and Norfolk, '21st Century Yokel' takes the reader on journey that is both laugh-out-loud funny and deeply thoughtful, but never, ever dull - especially if his Mr Cox Senior is around.
* Reviews, Recommendations and More! * Established 2011 * New posts first Saturday of each month (or when life allows) *
26 June 2018
Simply Wander-Full!
19 June 2018
Feathered Fiends?
Earlier this week, I finished 'The Story Keeper', the second novel by Anna Mazzola. If you want moody Gothic with a heroine coming to terms with herself and her past, you've come to the right place!
September 1857: Audrey Hart escapes a miserable home life to the Isle of Skye, pursing her dream of becoming a folklorist. As well as stories of fairies and magic, she comes to seek the truth about herself, as this is where her mother died in tragic circumstances. Audrey enters the employ of the reclusive Miss Buchanan and struggles to earn the trust of the local people, scarred by the unkindnesses of the Buchanan family. Everything changes when Audrey finds the body of a young, local girl washed up on the shore. While she suddenly gains acceptance in the community, she also finds herself part of something more sinister. Can the mythical Sluagh, the spirits of the dead in the form of flocks of black birds, really be abducting the young women of Skye, or is something more Earth-bound - and more terrible - at work?
September 1857: Audrey Hart escapes a miserable home life to the Isle of Skye, pursing her dream of becoming a folklorist. As well as stories of fairies and magic, she comes to seek the truth about herself, as this is where her mother died in tragic circumstances. Audrey enters the employ of the reclusive Miss Buchanan and struggles to earn the trust of the local people, scarred by the unkindnesses of the Buchanan family. Everything changes when Audrey finds the body of a young, local girl washed up on the shore. While she suddenly gains acceptance in the community, she also finds herself part of something more sinister. Can the mythical Sluagh, the spirits of the dead in the form of flocks of black birds, really be abducting the young women of Skye, or is something more Earth-bound - and more terrible - at work?
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