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A Wicked Old Woman – Blog Tour – Guest Post – Top Ten Books

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I’m happy to welcome author Ravinder Randhawa onto the blog today with a guest post as part of the A Wicked Old Woman blog tour. A Wicked Old Woman is an adult contemporary novel full of drama, masquerade and mischief.

In a bustling British city, Kulwant mischievously masquerades as a much older woman, using her walking stick like a Greek chorus, ‘…stick-leg-shuffle-leg-shuffle…’ encountering new adventures and getting bruised by the jagged edges of her life.

There’s the Punjabi punk who rescues her after a carefully calculated fall; Caroline, her gregarious friend from school days, who watched over her dizzy romance with ‘Michael the Archangel’, Maya the myopic who can’t see beyond her broken heart and Rani/Rosalind, who’s just killed a man …

Vividly bringing to life a bit of the 60s, 70s and 80s.

 

Ravinder Randhawa – My Top Ten Books

This is an impossible and cruel question. I’ll pick from the many books that sit on my shelves, which stand out at the moment.

  1. His Dark Materials trilogy by Philip Pullman: This may be a bit of a cheat as there are three books here, but since they all follow on, the story counts as one. Needless to say the writing is brilliant; a master craftsman is at work here. Just one little observation, I think it’s rather ironic that Philip Pullman, a male writer, has a female heroine, and J.K. Rowling, a woman writer chooses a male hero. I believe Rowling could just as well have had a female protagonist, as all the qualities in Harry could just as well exist in a girl, and wish that she had done so; it would have raised the profile of women in literature. But the rather unpleasant reality of sexism in the world makes me wonder if the Potter books would have been as successful as they have been, with a female heroine. Although, it’s worth remembering that Bend It Like Beckham, did wonders for women football players. Equally, I don’t believe in dictating to writers and if that’s how the character came to her then that’s how it has to be. The comparison that I want to make between His Dark Materials trilogy and the Harry Potter books is that the Dark Materials trilogy, as well as being a brilliant read, containing magical elements, discusses serious issues, such as the existence of the soul and God, whereas the Harry Potter books don’t have this deeper vein.
  2. All the Birds Singing by Evie Wyld: this is a story that travels back to itself. Beautifully structured, so that we start in the present, then shift to a near past in Australia, and keep switching till the present and the past reach a crisis point. Jake, an Australian woman, is running a sheep farm in a remote area of Scotland. We begin to sense that something terrible has happened, which has mangled her life, and brought her to this desolate place, as well as the fact that when she rings home, she hides her number and never speaks. This is a book about wounded lives, families and finding love in unlikely places.
  3. The Reluctant Fundamentalist by Mohsin Hamid is a deceptively simple yet serious read. A slim book, barely 200 pages, it begins in a gentle, old fashioned manner as Changez, the narrator, tells his life story to someone who appears to be an American tourist in Pakistan. As they sit in a Lahore café, working their way through tea, snacks and food, Changez’s story of being a student in America, relationships, working for a valuation firm and his growing disenchantment are quietly sketched in. The personal, emotional and political are all brought together in a seamless and almost inevitable way. This book quietly lifts the covers on something important happening in our world.
  4. The Long Song by Andrea Levy. I was hesitant to start this book, as it’s about slavery on a sugar plantation and I wondered if I could bear to read another book about that pain and suffering. Actually Andrea Levy has a deft and sensitive touch, knowing how much to portray and how much to suggest. We ‘live’ the story through July and everything becomes vivid and personal through her.
  5. Neverwhere, by Neill Gaiman. I’ve always enjoyed stories that mix the ordinary and known with the strange and hidden. Where a simple door can lead to another world or where time shifts and turns the story into something else. “Under the streets of London, there’s a place most people could never even dream of… the city of the people who have fallen between the cracks.” Fast moving and inventive Neverwhere takes the reader on a crazy, unusual ride.
  6. The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini. I hadn’t read a book about Afghanistan, but the country is so perpetually in our consciousness that when I came across the Kite Runner it was a natural choice. Interestingly, for me, the Kite Runner is about guilt and the impossibility of burying it. A word that seems to hover over the country of Afghanistan itself; poor, beleaguered, suffering Afghanistan – who and how many are guilty of bringing it to this terrible condition? The book is about two young boys and an act of betrayal. Echoing the acts of betrayal by countries which have used Afghanistan as their battlefield. A sweeping epic story, gripping from the beginning to the end; it takes us into the heart of an ancient culture, and into the frail heart of being human. “There is a way to be good again…” is a line that I love from this book, acting almost like a beacon, making you hope the story will travel towards it.
  7. The Humans by Matt Haig. One of the chapters begins with a wonderful line: “Humans are one of the few intelligent beings in the galaxy who haven’t quite solved the problem of death.” An alien has taken over the body of Professor Andrew Martin and is finding life, family and people very confusing. However, at the end of his mission he writes to his fellow aliens: “And let us consider this: what if there actually is a meaning to human life? And what if – humour me – life on earth is something not just to fear and ridicule but also cherish? What then?” Indeed, what then? I like books that ask the big questions.
  8. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen. A real golden oldie. My bookshelves have never been without this book. I have an old, pocket hardback, published by Oxford University Press in 1964, which I must have picked up in a charity shop. Everyone knows the story, so I’ll just write the first fabulous sentence: “It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.”
  9. Corinna Lang, Goodbye. By Vivian Connell. I doubt anyone will have heard of this book or have even read it. Another one of my finds in a charity shop, it was first published in 1954 and is about Corinna Lang, Hollywood film star, who sets out to play the most important role of all – that of herself. There’s espionage, danger, double agents and an enigmatic spy. Corinna is intelligent, witty and adventurous. Eat your heart out Mr. Bond.
  10. The Chalet School Stories. By Elinor Brent-Dyer. Another cheat I fear, but with around 58 novels in the series, it’s an amazing feat of sustained story telling, engendering the kind of addiction that soap operas create. These days we’d probably find some quite un PC sentences here and there but it’s also a world of snowy Alps, danger and plucky young women.

Ravinder Randhawa. @RealRavs. www.ravinderrandhawa.com

Don’t forget to check out the rest of the blog tour – details below.

Do any of Ravinder’s picks make your top ten list too?

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Out of Orbit Blog Tour – Guest post by author Chele Cooke

I had author Chele Cooke on my blog a while back to talk about her vampire novel Teeth – now she’s back with the third book in her science-fiction series Out of Orbit. On the 29th October 2015, Rack and Ruin continues the story started in the first two books, Dead and Buryd and Fight or Flight. (Click on the titles to find out more about each book).

Chele is on my blog today though to share her Top Ten Series (not including her own, which of course you are welcome to add to your top ten lists).

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My Top Ten Series

Earlier in this blog tour, I answered the question of my top ten favourite books. I had to narrow down my possible choices, and in the end, I still ended up with an entire series as one of my answers. Luckily, hopefully choosing my favourite series of books will be a bit easier.

  1. The Harry Potter series by JK Rowling

This is the book series that I couldn’t choose a single book for. I love it. I first read Harry Potter as a teenager and I was one of those people who queued at midnight for the final books. These books are what started me writing (I started out writing fanfiction) and so they’ll always be very close to my heart.

  1. The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins

I ploughed through this series in a matter of days. I was lucky that I waited so long to pick it up, because it meant I didn’t have to wait. Admittedly, I think the third book doesn’t stand up to the rest of the series, it felt a bit squashed to me, but it’s still a series I adore rereading.

  1. A Song of Ice and Fire by G.R.R Martin

I’ve listened to this series on audiobook, and at about 80 hours per book, I’ve put a lot of time into it already. I both love and loath the detail that goes into these books, and there are times when I really wish someone had taken an axe to all the excess characters and points of view, but never let it be said that G.R.R Martin doesn’t know how to make a detailed and interesting fantasy world.

  1. The Discworld series by Terry Pratchett

There is far too much to say about Discworld to put into a small paragraph. I actually started out with Discworld via a point and click PC game. It was, without a doubt, the most infuriating game I have ever come across. If anyone can get through it without looking up answers, I bow down to you! Also, getting through it without hating the phrase “That doesn’t work” is impossible.

Terry Pratchett is far more of a wizard than anyone in his books. What he has created is astonishing.

  1. The Wicked Years by Gregory Maguire

Not only did Maguire retell The Wizard of Oz, but he continued his wonderful story with three more fantastic books, turning what little we knew about Oz into a story far more interesting than the original tale. I love his detail and his willingness to roam into the darker sides.

  1. Lord of the Rings by J.R.R Tolkien

We’re including the Hobbit in this! I don’t care what anyone says, I am including the Hobbit in this series because I love it, and I don’t think it should be discounted. Tolkien is one of the fathers of Fantasy, and I’d not be able to get through a series top ten without including him. Like Martin and Pratchett, the world he has created is beyond astounding.

  1. The Wool Trilogy by Hugh Howey

There’s something mesmerisingly claustrophobic about Hugh Howey’s Wool trilogy. Taking place inside underground silos, there is a closeness to it that Howey has recreated wonderfully in his language.

  1. Sword of Truth series by Terry Goodkind

Another epic fantasy series where the books are quite long by themselves. I’m still only about four books in (out of more than a dozen) because other books sometimes get in the way. They’re quite dense books, and can be a little hard going at times, but I love the complexity of the world, the magic system, and the history. Plus, Zed is amazing! How can you not love a crazy old wizard you first see standing naked on a stone holding a chicken?

  1. The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S Lewis

Yep, I’m going back to childhood! These, along with Roald Dahl, were some of my favourite books as a kid, and I get quite nostalgic for them.

  1. Books by Jane Green

A little bit of cheating here, because technically these books are not a series. They’re stand alone novels, but all by the same author. I love Jane Green and she writes most of my favourite comfort read books. I can pick up any one of them and know I’ll enjoy it. So, while they’re not about the same characters, and they’re not the same settings, they give me the same feeling, and sometimes that’s just what I need.

I only cheated once, hurrah! There are some other series I could have mentioned, but admittedly those are the series where I feel like one of the books let it down. For example, I really enjoyed the Divergent series, but I felt the last book and the one-eighty the story took, let it down quite a bit.

I’d also like to celebrate the fact I didn’t go into my top ten TV series, because that is another wide and interesting list.

So, how many of Chele’s favourite series have you read?

Giveaway

There is a tour wide giveaway.

The prizes include;

A full set of Out of Orbit series in paperback and a £25 Amazon giftcard

Ten ebook sets of the Out of Orbit series

Click on the link above to enter and check out the other blog stops below.

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