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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.

The Exiled by Sarah Daniels – Blog Tour Book Review

About the Book

Trust no one.

It is six months since the Arcadia set sail for the first time in forty years. But this wasn’t the freedom the inhabitants were hoping for. Esther Crossland did what she had to do, but it has left a trail of destruction in her wake. Now the wrecked ship is abandoned. Its inhabitants are in exile, trapped in sprawling make-shift shelters made up of warehouse, tents, shipping containers.

Esther and Nik, architects of the rebellion, are on the run. Esther is in hiding, desperate to do something to help her people, and Nik seems to have abandoned all hope, on a journey taking him further and further from home. And neither of them want to face up to their true feelings about one another . . .

Not only that, there is a new villain in town. With the fall of Commander Hadley, it’s left to the ruthless Admiral Janek to deal with the traitors, and her own past is beginning to catch-up with her.

Then the shaky ceasefire negotiated by General Lall, Nik’s mum, falls apart. Nik and Esther find themselves in a world of betrayals and double crossings – a game of power, with no one to trust but themselves.

It’s time for the final showdown.

About the Author

Sarah Daniels is an ex-archaeologist who escaped academia and now writes stories from her home in rural Lincolnshire. Her work has been published in various online magazines and has been nominated for best British and Irish Flash Fiction and Best Small Fictions.

If you want to contact her, you can do so at the following locations:

Website:  http://www.sarahdanielsbooks.com

Instagram: @sarahdanielsbooks
TikTok: @sarahdanielsbooks
Twitter: @sarahdanbooks

What I Thought

With a gap of a few months since the end first book The Stranded we spend a little while filling in what and happened and why. We also get some new POV characters introduced. First up we return to follow Esther who is stuck in the camp but exiled from the rebellion she was instrumental in. Although there’s a new love interest in town to keep her somewhat busy.

And Meg, a character we met in book one but who was never named then. Meg is a complex character and as readers our relationship with her is equally as complicated. 

While the pace of the first book was breakneck it does slow a little here, allowing us to settle into the reality of Esther’s new day to day. There’s quite a few chapters back and forth between these two until we get to hear from Nik again – and Hadley’s old Boss Janek picks up where his evil left off. Nik has run away from everything – literally -and his grief for May continues and isn’t just swept aside.

I guess one aspect I’d have liked to better understand in this series is what happened to split the US apart so dramatically and how the Federated States came to be so dire in relation to human rights but then I look at what is currently happening in the world (not just the US) and sadly can see how something like that could happen. 

In the first book Hadley – although terrible – had a personal backstory that gave a hint of relatability to him. Janek has no such redeeming feature and just seems intent on destruction. Luckily some of the other characters around her have more humanity! 

As soon as Nik and Esther were back together I felt the tension ratchet – both between them and in the story as a whole. It was another white knuckle ride to the finish. 

I have to admit that the bot technology I found freaky as anything, and the scene with Nik near the end did not help with my fear of normal nor robotic spiders. 

Overall this Duology has a great series of characters, a compelling drive towards escape and freedom and brilliant writing. I did slightly prefer the claustrophobic nature of book one but this was a strong conclusion which upped the stakes from fighting the Coalies on the ship to battling the whole Federated States and a lot of evil individuals along the way. The ending was both hopeful for our characters and disappointing for society – because humans never learn from our mistakes and seem doomed to repeat them! 

One of the things I loved the most was that this was not a chosen one tale. Neither characters had special powers, and both were thrust into positions in the rebellion they weren’t ready for. I enjoyed how Esther’s calling as a doctor remained consistent throughout and although she steps up into badassery and wavers at times, she remains gentle at heart too.

Huge thanks to The Write Reads and the Publisher for the gifted copy for the purposes of this honest review. The rest of the tour is ongoing but I think everyone is loving this series.

Straight Expectations by Calum McSwiggan – The Write Reads Ultimate Blog Tour Book Review

About the Book

The brilliant debut novel from author, presenter and LGBTQ+ advocate Calum McSwiggan!

Seventeen-year-old Max has always been out, proud and just a little spoiled. Frustrated by the lack of romantic options in his small-town high school, during an argument with his lifelong best friend Dean, Max lashes out and says he wishes he had never been born gay.

Max gets more than he bargained for when he wakes up to find his wish has come true – not only have his feelings for boys vanished, but so has Dean.

With his school life turned upside down and his relationship with his family in tatters, Max sets out on a journey of rediscovery to find a way back to the life he took for granted, and the romance he thought he’d never have.

A deliciously romantic YA debut that’s What If It’s Us and One Last Stop!

Add it to Goodreads here: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/61335651-straight-expectations

About the Author

Calum McSwiggan (born 21 May 1990) is a British YouTuber, blogger, and online radio presenter. McSwiggan creates video content on LGBT+ issues, mental health, and sex and relationships.[2][3][4] He began creating YouTube videos in 2013 and began hosting The Calum McSwiggan Show on Fubar Radio in 2017.

What I Thought

This is a modern and gay version of Big with our protagonist Max wishing away his gayness in a fit of frustration and being transported into what his life would have been like if he was straight. The absolute horror! (There is a Freaky Friday reference made in the book but I chose Big because the switch here only directly affects the one person).

The switch does take a little time to happen but I think it’s important for the plot that we spend time with the characters in their present reality first. We also get a slightly extended resolution which, for me, allowed more time for everything to be wrapped up leaving this as a very satisfying stand alone read – not that I’d be against reading more books featuring these characters.

I think fans of Simon James Green and Heartstopper will eat this up both because of the humour, and in that it features a whole diverse cast and I loved how intersectionality was addressed too with Max being forced to face up to his white gay privilege.

I really appreciated how all the side characters were explored as individuals in their own right and not just in terms of how they fit into Max’s life. And gosh this is the second YA book I’ve read in a row that features the parents!

Fans of musicals will also be in luck reading this and I don’t think I’ll be alone in desperately wanting to see the drag versions of Mean Girls and Little Shop of Horrors become a real thing.

Thanks to The Write Reads and the publisher for access to the gifted eARC. Opinions are my own. Do check out the tour to see other people’s views.