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Dear Hero by Hope Bolinger and Alyssa Roat – Book Review


Dear Hero is a YA superhero chat fiction released by INtense Publications on 28th September 2020. I was contacted by one of the authors and gifted a copy for the purposes of an honest review. The blurb made me swipe right but was the story a perfect match?

Book Cover


About the Book


TWEET CUTE X I HATE EVERYONE BUT YOU

Up-and-coming teen superhero Cortex is on top of the world—at least, until his villain dumps him. If he’s going to save his reputation, he needs a new antagonist, and fast.

Meanwhile, the villainous Vortex has once again gotten a little overeager and taken out a hero prematurely. Will any young hero be able to keep up with her? Maybe she should work on finding a steady relationship with an enemy she won’t kill in the first round.

So the two turn to Meta-Match, a nemesis pairing site for heroes and villains, where they match right away. After throwing punches at each other behind coffee shops, practicing their fight choreography, and hiring henchmen to do their bidding (mostly just getting them coffee), they begin to realize they have a lot more in common than just names that annoyingly rhyme. 

But not everything in the superhero world is as it seems. Who are the real heroes and villains? And just how fine of a line is there between love and hate? When darkness from the past threatens them both, Cortex and V may need to work together to make it out alive. 

About the authors


Hope Bolinger is a literary agent at C.Y.L.E. and a graduate of Taylor University’s professional writing program. More than 700 of her works have been featured in various publications ranging from HOOKED to Writer’s Digest. Her boarding school drama Blaze, (Illuminate YA) released in June, and the sequel Den released July 2020. She’s a theater nerd, occasional runway model, is way too obsessed with superheroes, and may be caught in a red cloak, fairy wings, or a Belle costume in her downtown, for no reason. Her favourite way to procrastinate is to connect with her readers on social media (@hopebolinger). Check out more about her at hopebolinger.com.


Alyssa Roat grew up in Tucson, Arizona, but her heart is in Great Britain, the inspiration for her YA contemporary fantasy Wraithwood. She is the publicity manager at Mountain Brook Ink, a literary agent at C.Y.L.E., a freelance writer, and an editor with Sherpa Editing Services. She holds a B.S. in professional writing from Taylor University. She has also worked for Illuminate YA Publishing, Little Lamb Books, Zondervan Library, and as the online editor and a staff writer for The Echo News. Over 200 of her works have been featured in various publications, from newspapers, to national magazines, to anthologies. Her name is a pun, which means you can learn more about her at http://www.alyssawrote.com or on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook as @alyssawrote.


What I Thought


This book was so much fun and just what I needed. Structured like Tinder and then WhatsApp chats I love how much we grew to know the characters. They even actually meet, we just have them chatting about their meet ups after the fact, rather than “seeing them” live.


I was wondering if the format would sustain for the whole story and I’m pleased to report that it did. More characters are introduced as we move forward and there is lots of witty banter to make this a pacy read.


As well as a meet cute, we have a break up and trying out other partnerships, and I think this says as much about modern dating as it does about superheroes. Are these two meant to be together, and what sort of relationship are they destined for?


If you enjoyed Despicable Me and love superheroes then I’m pretty sure you will enjoy this. There are lots of nods to well known heroes and villains and plenty of brand new characters. I’d definitely swipe right to a follow up read.


If you read this I’d love to find out who your favourite character was and in the meantime tell me your favourite superhero/villain pairing in the comments.


Thanks to Hope for reaching out to me on my blog and for the gifted copy.

The Tribulations of August Barton by Jennifer Leblanc – Blog Tour Book Review

Author: Jennifer LeBlanc

Narrator: James Oliva

Length: 4 hours 28 minutes

Series: August Barton, Book 1

Publisher: Jennifer LeBlanc

Released: Apr. 20, 2018

Genre: Humor

Read the rest of this entry

The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman – Blog Tour Audiobook Review #TTMCAudioTour

Blog Tour Poster

There has been lots of buzz about The Thursday Murder Club so when invited I snapped up the chance to join the audiobook blog tour. It’s already out now so do grab yourself a copy and pop the kettle on.


About the Book


In a peaceful retirement village, four unlikely friends meet up once a week to investigate unsolved killings.

But when a local property developer shows up dead, ‘The Thursday Murder Club’ find themselves in the middle of their first live case.

The four friends, Elizabeth, Joyce, Ibrahim and Ron, might be pushing eighty but they still have a few tricks up their sleeves. Can our unorthodox but brilliant gang catch the killer, before it’s too late?

Listen to a Sample On Audible 

https://adbl.co/3kX0zJv


About the Author

Photo: © Penguin Books UK

Richard Osman has worked as an executive producer on numerous UK shows. Richard’s popularity and tremendous knowledge of trivia led to him presenting his own BBC quiz show and several others, as well as being the host of Pointless with 7 million views. He is also a regular on panel shows and writes a column for the Radio Times.He has more than 830k followers across social media.


About the Audiobook Narrator


Lesley Manville is an English Actress of Stage and Screen who frequently collaborates with Director Mike Leigh.

What I Thought


Pointless is one of my Nainy’s favourite shows – reminder Kirsty ‘Do not phone when Pointless is on!’ so I am familiar with Richard Osman, as well as following him on twitter thanks to his 2017 Red Nose Day World Cup of Biscuits twitter poll which saw the Chocolate Digestive reign supreme. The Thursday Murder Club was definitely on my radar and I’m simply going to say upfront that I loved it.

This is quintessentially English cosy-crime in the vein of Midsommer Murders but just imagine Diana and Tom from the BBC sitcom Waiting for God as the detectives. I’ve also likened it to Robin Stevens middle grade schoolgirl detective series Murder Most Unladylike imagining if Daisy and Hazel have grown up and gone to live in a retirement village together.


The description calls the village peaceful – ha! But the setting is as much a character as the people and Osman paints it vividly. As an Occupational Therapist I do like the concept of retirement villages more than residential and nursing homes and the Jigsaw room is where the occupation happens. Well. It’s where the Thursday Murder Club meet and put the pieces of old murder puzzles together, until there’s suddenly one in their midst.


The characters at first are larger than life, some might consider them stereotypes, but the joy of this novel is in getting to know them and breaking down those stereotypes much like we do in real life. It’s positive that despite being a rural British location the diversity of the characters in terms of ethnicity is included.


These characters are on the older age of the spectrum of the human condition and Osman treats them with the respect and individuality that all older people deserve. I love the fact that their previous lives and careers play such an important role in their personalities and in the story, as it would. So often older people are just seen as the troubles they are currently having. We have former police, healthcare and union workers, and a potential former spy.


As expected in a book featuring older people, health conditions such as strokes and dementia appear and concepts such as loss of independence, assisted dying and bereavement also feature heavily. Definite trigger warnings for a whole host of death related topics but it’s handled sensitively.


Joyce is our only first person point of view character as she is documenting what has been going on and I loved her side story featuring her relationship with her daughter Joanna, one I’m sure is echoed up and down the country. And Joyce’s Lemon Drizzle cake seems to be better than M&S’s. Who’d have thought that the instigator of the World Cup of Biscuits would feature food so prominently in his book?! 🤷‍♀️ Love the pop culture references that litter the stories including the reality tv shows Ron’s celebrity son gets invited onto.


There are also actual police detectives involved and they also are fully realised characters who I suspect we will get to find out more about as we continue with the series. We have former London MET officer Donna and Chris and how they interconnect with the Murder Club provides some of the most humorous parts of the book.


It’s a slice of life, murder mystery with observational humour and more humanity peeled back as we move through the tale.


Who Did It?


Ha. As if I’d spoil that! Let’s just say it’s pretty twisty turns so if you work it out you should definitely join The Thursday Murder Club in their next adventure. Yup there’s more on the way. There’s an exclusive interview between Richard Osman and Marian Keyes – which you shouldn’t listen to until after you’ve finished the book -where we get some exciting hints about what’s to come in book two. You can even pre-order it now although we don’t yet know the title.
Do check out the other stops on the blog tour to see what they thought. Thank you to Chloe at Penguin for the gifted audio review copy for the purposes of this honest review.

After listening I’m even more excited to get my signed copy from Goldsboro books – look at those stencil edges 😍.