Blog Archives
Somehow, Somehow by Nyanda Foday – Blog Tour Book Review

About the Book
During lockdown Nyanda was at university. She chose to stay in her student accommodation rather than going home to her family. She spent 79 days alone, with deteriorating mental health, trying to study for her degree.
This visceral, astonishing collection from one of the country’s most exciting emerging performance poets explores this unprecedented moment in global history – from a personal and fascinating point of view.
About the Author
Nyanda Foday was Birmingham’s Young Poet Laureate 2016-2018, and is inspired by the impact that words can have to create, unite, explain and enjoy. She strives to connect with others where she can by sharing and listening to others’ work. Her parents moved from Sierra Leone to London before having Nyanda.
Instagram: https://instagram.com/nyandafoday
X: https://x.com/nyandaisapoet
What I Thought
Be warned because this book discusses the COVID-19 pandemic. This is one woman’s experience of our collective struggle. Future history in 62 pages of poetry.
This is the type of poetry I enjoy, conversational and accessible. And what could be more accessible than reading about our collective experience. But of course within that broad event everyone had their own individual story. I hope more people write and share their individual insights too.
The opening poem Conversation Topic ends with:
“It should be fine,
So long as we remember to wash our hands.”
And boy does it frustrate me to still see this initial advice on government sites not superseded by talk of Covid’s airborne nature.
Other poems talk of loneliness, daily walks, hoarding toilet paper, clapping for the NHS and so many zoom calls. About the fear of re-entering a society where everyone around us became unsafe.
Two other future historic events occurred during the pandemic and each gets their own parallel poem in this collection.
The murder of Sarah Everard and the subsequent police brutality at the vigil. Foday perfectly expresses the fears that this struck at the core of every woman.
The murder of George Floyd and the resulting Black Lives Matter marches. The incredulity that it took a period of closing capitalism for white people like me to wake up to the reality of racism and the frustration of everything going back to normal. Disabled people can very much speak to this too.
The poem Poppy spoke to me personally because I too share Nyanda’s gratitude to four legged saviours.
And as an Occupational Therapist the poem Creating and most importantly the lines:
“I let myself drift in and out of things.
I let myself be bad at it”
There is so much pressure to be good at everything that we often forgot to enjoy the process, the mistakes and the simple joy of doing.
Nyanda’s poems do not speak to the loss of loved ones or her own health. Those are stories for others to write and I hope they do. I want to read them, to understand how others lived these strange years.
I particularly appreciated that Nyanda’s final poem Post-Pandemic actually reflects back the fact that for many people it’s not all over, not something we can just put in the past. But I think reading things like this and feeling that connection to others can help us all move on. I think this will be a collection I will return to and maybe even write alongside.
I would urge people to pick up this book when they feel able. You will find more truth in one of these poems than in the upcoming former PM’s entire book.
Huge thank you to the publisher Anderson Press and Bee At Kaleidoscopic Tours for arranging a gifted copy for the purposes of an honest review. Do check out what the rest of the reviewers thought too.


Finding Phoebe by Gavin Extence – Blog Tour Book Review

About the Book
Phoebe is autistic. She prefers to stay in her comfort zone: walking her dog, writing fantasy fiction, surviving school with as few incidents as possible.
When her best (and only) friend rebels and gets a secret boyfriend, Phoebe reluctantly agrees to cover for her. Before long, Phoebe’s dealing with all sorts of things she’d rather not, like deception, fashionable jackets, and the bewildering politics of the school chess club. Breaking the rules has never been Phoebe’s thing, but as events take a seriously unexpected turn, she realises there’s more to her than she ever imagined . . .
(Please note at the end of my review I have added some trigger warnings but some may be considered spoilers)
About the Author
Gavin Extence was born in 1982 and grew up in the interestingly named village of Swineshead, Lincolnshire. From the ages of 5-11, he enjoyed a brief but illustrious career as a chess player, winning numerous national championships and travelling to Moscow and St Petersburg to pit his wits against the finest young minds in Russia. He won only one game.
Gavin is currently working on his second novel. When he is not writing, he enjoys cooking, amateur astronomy and going to Alton Towers.
Twitter: http://twitter.com/gavinextence
What I Thought
First up I loved Phoebe’s voice. Her character practically leaps off the page, after slowly and methodically planning the leap of course!
Phoebe is autistic and in the author’s acknowledgment at the end he tells us he wrote this book for his autistic daughter. I would love to read some reviews from #actuallyautistic readers to see how they viewed the representation but I felt it was nuanced and respectful.
Phoebe is a very forthright character and I really enjoyed how we see her using tools at home to self regulate and how she already knows and understands both her autism and her own needs. She likes a routine, she likes things to be logical and she doesn’t always understand what people mean but that doesn’t make her naive or inept, it makes her thoughtful and analytical. She knows when she doesn’t get something and this does become a source of concern for her at times.
Phoebe also knows her own mind, she knows what she wants out of life but she does go through a slightly misguided period of creating her own social improvement plan. Sometimes the plan helps, sometimes it doesn’t, but it does introduce chess club to her life so she doesn’t just have to play against her phone (although I think she finds that preferable to be honest).
Of course there are a few arguments between her and her best friend Bethany when Phoebe doesn’t catch on as quickly to what is going on with Bethany (they are teenage girls after all). But on the whole I think Bethany is an example of a good friend who accepts and respects Phoebe for who she is, as Phoebe does in return for her. It feels like very much a reciprocal friendship.
Phoebe’s relationship with Bethany is one of the stable things in her routine – that is until Will comes along to rock the boat. And boy does he make the sea choppy. There was a scene toward the end that surprised me at the time although when thinking back the author had added subtle cues to this development. I also both did and didn’t enjoy Phoebe’s interactions with Bethany’s very religious parents and admire her later interactions with them in trying to be a good friend and make Bethany’s life better.
Phoebe narrates the book to her mum who has died, and who also had ME while she was alive, and this adds a nuance that Phoebe is also facing all these challenges growing up without a female figure to guide her, although she still has a very supportive dad. During the book Phoebe and her friend are in the last year of GCSEs and have to do work experience. Phoebe wants to be a writer and manages to arrange some time with the small town’s reclusive poet. There was definitely some humour in these scenes and although used as a mentor figure, Mrs Frost (also autistic coded) is most definitely not a mother figure. I also enjoyed all the bookish references and it turn out I have very similar taste to Phoebe and have added a couple more books to my TBR as a result.
Boys aren’t the only thing that disrupt Phoebe’s worldview and I’m glad that this meant we got a chance to meet her grandmother as early mentions of her had me liking her and wanting to know more about their relationship.
“Furthermore, it turned out that I could cope in a crisis, just as long as it wasn’t my crisis.”
I related to this quote so hard although I think Phoebe actually handled her own crisis better than I would – I would just sit in a corner and sob even at nearly 45!
The setting of the book was so interesting too. They live in a small island town of 160 which sometimes gets cut off with the tide from where they go to school and so Bethany and Phoebe board together at the school part time. No Malory Towers style midnight feasts here although a late night sneaking out does occur.
Overall I found this thought provoking, warm and a wonderful exploration of teen female friendship. If you read this I think that like Bethany, you’d come to realise – who wouldn’t want a Phoebe in their corner?
Trigger Warnings Below (May Be Considered Spoilers)
Teen Pregnancy and Abortion, Death of a Parent, Cancer, Ableism, Homophobia, Extra marital affair, Religious Trauma, Loss of Faith
Huge thanks to Bee at Kaleidoscopic Tours and the Publisher Anderson Press for the gifted copy. This review is my honest opinion. Do check out the rest of the tour stops to see what everyone else thought too.


Lost for Words by Aoife Walsh – #Bookstagram Tour Book Review

It’s my spot on the Lost for Words #bookstagram tour organised by @darkroomtours today and I thought I’d share my review here too.
Synopsis
Dallas’s life was turned upside down the day her mum was killed in a traffic accident. Now she lives with her brothers, step-sister and her mum’s partner Gemma in a too-small house filled with bickering and grief. As the end of primary school approaches, Dallas learns that the local library has run out of funding and will soon be closing. Dallas decides she cannot let another thing she loves be lost. Together with her friends Aiza and Ruby, and her freewheeling American aunt Jessi, she starts a campaign to save the library for everyone.
A beautifully told tale about family, grief and growing up.
Author

Aoife Walsh lives in Oxford with three nice children, a nice fellow and a sweet cat. Her previous books are Look After Me and Too Close To Home. Like Lost For Words they are about families, but then in her opinion hardly any families are the same, whatever Tolstoy reckons.
Instagram: http://instagram.com/AoifeMPWalsh
Twitter: http://twitter.com/AoifeMPWalsh
What I Thought
Although eleven year old Dallas takes on the council in her attempt to save the local library this is really a story about family. And Dallas’ family has been rocked by tragedy.
This story is told from Dallas’ point of view and through her we explore grief, challenging family dynamics, friendship and a dabbling in politics. From her very first school debate on Brexit 😂, to her clashes with the council, Dallas grows in confidence – but will it be enough?
This is a middle grade story but with Dallas on the verge of leaving primary school and moving up to secondary school. With the arrival of her aunt Jessi from Texas she is offered an even bigger move, and when you feel like the spare tyre in your family, feeling wanted is very comforting.
After her mum’s death, partner Gemma is left in charge and she’s got a job, two 4 year olds (one with autism), an 18 year old and Dallas to contend with, all within the confines of a small house on the river. The sense of lack of space is expressed well and I love how Dallas uses this to express why libraries are so important, even though she hasn’t used hers for months.
The dynamic between Dallas and her two best friends, Ruby and Aiza is an escape for her. They have a few adventures, challenging bullies, walking the line between becoming bullies themselves, a trip to London gone wrong. I particularly liked the scenes where Ruby asks Aiza more about her Muslim Faith after hearing negative comments at home. I love that the girls are able to have this dialogue. I would definitely be interested in reading stories from each of their perspectives too. Ruby in particular is so quiet, whilst I’m sure she has lots to say. Neither of these girls has the most stable home life but they look after each other, and also have the ability to be honest with each other too. This is a great example of female friendship.
I highly recommend this read, it’s empowering for kids to be shown how to stand up for something and Aoife Walsh has written a dynamic and imperfect family or three. I really hope to read more about these girls.
Lost for Words is released this Thursday – 4th July. Goodreads link.
Thanks to Darkroom Tours and Anderson Press for gifting me the copy of this book for the purposes of an honest review.
Do check out the rest of the tour stops






