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Scarlet by Genevieve Cogman – Blog Tour Book Review

About the Book

Revolution’s a bloodthirsty business . . . Scarlet is a thrilling reinvention of the tale of The Scarlet Pimpernel with the addition of magic and even more mayhem.

Revolutionary France is no place to be, especially for aristocrat vampires facing the guillotine. But the League of the Scarlet Pimpernel are determined to rescue them. And they have an ace up their sleeve: Eleanor, a lowly maid from an English estate with a striking resemblance to French royalty.

For Eleanor, the League and their legendary deeds are little more than rumour – until she’s drawn into their most dangerous plot yet. The mission? Travel to France in disguise, impersonate Queen Marie Antoinette and rescue the royal family. If they succeed, it’ll be the heist of the century.

But there’s more to fear than ardent Revolutionaries. For Eleanor stumbles across a centuries-old war between vampires and their fiercest enemy. And they’re out for blood . . .

Scarlet is the first book in the Scarlet Revolution trilogy, set during the turbulent French Revolution, and featuring all of Genevieve Cogman’s trademark wit and fast-paced plotting. It’s perfect for fans of The Invisible Library series, Kim Newman and Gail Carriger.

(From https://www.panmacmillan.com/authors/genevieve-cogman/scarlet/9781529083729)

About the Author

Genevieve Cogman started on Tolkien and Sherlock Holmes at an early age, and has never looked back. But on a perhaps more prosaic note, she has an MSc in Statistics with Medical Applications and has wielded this in an assortment of jobs: clinical coder, data analyst and classifications specialist. Although The Invisible Library is her debut novel, she has also previously worked as a freelance roleplaying game writer. She is also the author of The Masked City and The Burning Page, both in The Invisible Library series. Genevieve Cogman’s hobbies include patchwork, beading, knitting and gaming, and she lives in the north of England.

(From https://www.panmacmillan.com/authors/genevieve-cogman/6979)

What I Thought

I’m sure I’ve seen a Scarlet Pimpernel film at some point but can’t really remember much about the plot so I did go in to this book with a pretty open mind having been hard sold by the addition of vampires. I am now affectionately thinking of this as The Marie Antoinette Switch meets Interview with a Vampire meets Six of Crows.

In essence this first book of the trilogy is a heist story where a lowly English maid gets dragged into a plot to save Marie and her children from the revolutionaries.

Eleanor as a character is immediately relatable and despite the uncertainty we may feel as the reader in knowing whose side we are meant to be on we definitely know that we want to see Eleanor safely through this.

The English Aristocrats in the League are a mix of foppish personalities and a rag tag bunch but there are a number of points that as the reader we are left questioning if what they are doing is truly right. But equally the revolutionaries are chopping people’s heads off left right and centre. Including those of vampires.

Eleanor has been living in the home of an English Vampire and her view of what vampires are has been understandably swayed by her own experience. But are they as honourable as Lady Sophie has seemed to be. Her journey into France has her questioning everything she has ever known.

Vampires are just an accepted part of this world which otherwise reflects what things were like at the time of Revolutionary France so I was a bit surprised by the addition of some extra supernatural magic which definitely plays a part in this book but will definitely have more prominence as the story develops across the trilogy.

I do think lots of seeds have been sewn in this book that means the role of Vampires and 🤐 will take centre stage as we enter book two. I’m intrigued about how the League will fit into this wider world view and excited to see more badass women spies.

Thanks to Black Crow PR and the publisher TOR UK for the gifted ARC. All opinions are my own. Check out the rest of the tour stops to see other people’s views.

Alone with you in the Ether by Olivie Blake – Blog Tour Book Review

About the Book

From the instant #1 Sunday Times bestselling author of The Atlas Six comes a story about the nature of love, what it means to be unwell, and how to face the fractures of yourself and still love as if you’re not broken. A must for fans of Sally Rooney and Gabrielle Zevin. 

Chicago, sometime. Two people meet in the armoury of the Art Institute by chance. Prior to their encounter, he is a doctoral student who manages his destructive thoughts with compulsive calculations about time travel; she is a bipolar counterfeit artist undergoing court-ordered psychotherapy. After their meeting, those things do not change. 

Everything else, however, is slightly different. 

Both obsessive, eccentric personalities, Aldo Damiani and Charlotte Regan struggle to be without each other from the moment they meet. The truth – that he is a clinically depressed, anti-social theoretician and she is a manipulative liar with a history of self-sabotage – means the deeper they fall in love, the more troubling their reliance on each other becomes. 

About the Author

Olivie Blake, the pseudonym of Alexene Farol Follmoitj, is a lover and writer of stories. She has penned several indie SFF projects, including the webtoon Clara and the Devil with illustrator Little Chmura and the BookTok viral Atlas series. As Alexene, she has written the young adult rom-com My Mechanical Romance. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband, new baby and rescue pit bull. Find her at olivieblake.com. 

What I Thought

Olivie Blake knows how to write complex and flawed characters and this book focuses in the main on our two protagonists, Regan and Aldo, and she does an excellent job of embedding us inside their heads. Not always the most fun places to be. 

I wonder if that may be why the POV is more omniscient. For me it put distance between us and them, almost like we were gods on Mount Olympus watching the mortals below. However, maybe being purely in their heads would have been too much. In fact the earlier sections include random character narrators – this gives an interesting ‘relationship in the eyes of observers’ vibe. 

There is a recurring motif of bees and  hexagons and the book is consequently presented in six parts (with an additional hypothesis). I have to admit to finding the earlier three parts easier to read. I think the will they won’t they part of their relationship was the most engaging to me. In part four, although I assumed we were still talking about Aldo and Regan, they didn’t get named for much of it – increasing the distance for the reader especially because of how part three ended and the feeling of missing out on part of the journey. It also focused on sex – a lot. 

In the latter parts the focus on Regan’s mental health becomes more intense and there is an author note about this in the acknowledgments which I do think it’s important to read (about medication use). I think the mania that the character is feeling is perhaps reflected in the choppy tangental way the story is told.

I’d wondered if there was going to be more on the time travel aspect so maybe a slight sci-fi or magical realism element, but, like Aldo’s calculations, that stays firmly in the theoretical. I really enjoyed all of the mathematical discussions and their early conversations was so true to how neurodivergent people braindump to connect. I loved it. Regan’s relationship with art is complex and how that developed alongside her relationship with Aldo did demonstrate how at times we do need others to see the potential in us. He was her muse if you like, unlocking what he already knew to be true.
This book is complex for me to review because I think it does what it sets out to really well – exploring how two people that society would consider broken connect. It’s complexity is in how healthy or unhealthy that relationship is – and the fact that both are true is truer to life than we usually see in fiction.


I do think it would make a marvellously romantically complex film in the vein of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind or Silver Linings Playbook and so if you are in the mood for either of those in book form I’d definitely pick this up. It’s much quieter and less plot heavy than The Atlas books though so do be prepared for a change of pace.

The writing is exquisite and there are some wonderfully described phrases and moments. I would say that to me the book reads more on the literary end. 

Thanks to Black Crow PR and the publisher for the gifted copy for the purposes of an honest review. Do check out the rest of the tour to see what everyone else thought too.

Lost in Time by A.G. Riddle – Blog Tour Book Review

About the Book

‘Amazing! One of the twistiest time-tales I’ve ever read.’ Diana Gabaldon

‘Many japes and high jinks ahead.’ The Times – A Science Fiction Book of the Month

From the worldwide bestselling author of The Extinction Trials, Departure, and The Atlantis Gene comes a new kind of sci-fi thriller: a time-travel murder mystery with a twist you’ll never see coming…

An absolute must for fans of Hugh Howey, Clive Cussler, and Michael Crichton.

Dr. Sam Anderson is one of the most celebrated scientists in history. Ten years ago, he invented Absolom – a device that changed the world forever. Now his life is about to be ripped apart – and his own creation may be to blame.

One fateful morning, Sam discovers that his girlfriend has been murdered and that his daughter, Adeline, is accused of the crime. Believing her innocent, but without proof, there is only one option – he must confess. But in the future, murderers aren’t sent to prison. They’re sent to the past, forever, back to the time of the dinosaurs, where they live out their lives alone.

In the present, Adeline embarks on a mission to find the person who framed her – uncovering more questions than answers. With conspiracies and secrets afoot, Adeline soon finds herself in the midst of a mystery that stretches across the past, present, and future – and leads to a revelation that will change everything.

Control the Past. Save the Future.

About the Author

A.G. Riddle spent ten years starting internet companies before deciding to pursue his true passion: writing fiction.

His novels have sold over five million copies worldwide and been translated in twenty-four languages. Several of his works are in development for feature films.

He lives in North Carolina with his wife, daughter, and eccentric dog.

What I Thought

I raced through the first 60% of this in one sitting and would have quite happily finished it all if it wasn’t for needing pesky sleep.

From the rug pulling opening to the dinosaur encounters I think readers might end up letting out breaths they fully know they were holding more than once.

Things I found myself thinking of when reading this first section – The Fugitive, Demolition Man, Jurassic Park, Bear Grylls.

Interestingly when I picked the story back up it changed pace slightly to focus mostly on Adeline’s point of view moving forward. I did slightly miss the to and fro of the alternating chapters although the pace was still pretty breakneck but with some quieter and more emotional moments.

Time travel is such a slippery thing and my head was spinning a bit at all the explanations of causality, etc. I always find it best not to delve into the mechanics too deeply (mainly because I don’t understand it – ironic when one of the books I’ve written features time travel). I definitely got pulled in by the twists and turns though, and wanted to know what had happened and if we would ever get Sam back from the Triassic.

This is however a story of grief and what you would do for a second chance to connect with missing loved ones and I found myself so connected with both Sam and Adeline, invested in the murder mystery and wondering how on earth they would solve getting back the unreachable. There’s also plenty of secrets and lies, mentions of drug abuse, gambling, chronic ill health and much more – the book really explores both sides of humanity.

The story presents two contrasting ways to use time travel and I can’t help thinking that exploring the ethical dilemmas both options present would make a great book club discussion.

This book was a Goldsboro GSFF pick of the month (and I’m luckily a member) – now I’ve read it understandably so. I signed up for the blog tour but reading from my own copy. Thanks to Black Crow PR and Head of Zeus for having me along for the thrilling ride. My thoughts and opinions are as ever my own.

The copy I have has an entirely different cover – which I also love – and I found it super satisfying that the stencilled edges artwork split right in the middle of the story (pg 225/450) but that is not as satisfying as the story which I would highly recommend.

Do follow along with the blog tour to see what everyone else thought too.