Amazon UK

Wednesday 24 April 2019

New video by Penguin Books UK on YouTube

GIVEAWAY 🎉 How To Dance The Charleston With Jacqueline Wilson
'Dancing the Charleston' is a brand new Jacqueline Wilson novel, full of glitz and glamour! Are you ready to trip the light fantastic with Mona? Out now: https://amzn.to/2UQJdVr You could win 1 of 3 family tickets to see Rip It Up throughout May. Subscribe to this 'Penguin Books UK' YouTube channel and leave a comment including your instagram or twitter username handle. UK residents only. Full terms & conditions are available here: http://bit.ly/2VZtXCg Buy tickets to see 'Rip It Up' now: http://bit.ly/2DwhY86 In a little cottage on the edge of the grand Somerset Estate, Mona lives with her aunt - a dressmaker to the lady of the house. Even though Mona never knew her mother and father, she knows Aunty tries to give her the best life she can. When Lady Somerset dies and a new member of the family inherits the house, life changes drastically for Mona. Suddenly she’s invited to dazzling balls, dines on delicious food and plays with wild new friends. But with these changes come secrets that Mona can’t dance away from. . . A fantastic stand-alone historical novel, perfect for fans of Hetty Feather and Wave Me Goodbye! ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subscribe to the Penguin channel: http://bit.ly/2ygTzig Follow us here: Twitter | http://www.twitter.com/penguinukbooks Website | http://bit.ly/xNmtGX Instagram | http://bit.ly/2ygyyo2 Facebook | http://bit.ly/2wmBKky


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Book Review: SHERWOOD by Meagan Spooner


via The Book Smugglers http://bit.ly/2KYUtKU

Book Review: SHERWOOD by Meagan Spooner

“We have a writer who is carving out an eminent oeuvre” – From a Low and Quiet Sea by Donal Ryan

"Inevitably, Joyce comparisons have been made with Ryan. I made them with The Spinning Heart, but it’s not necessarily the writing - because we shouldn’t be confusing these ‘voices’ as streams of consciousness - but instead the environment in which Ryan situates his characters. Religious imagery pervades the novel. Desires are moral quandaries and fathers are proxy and allusive. At one point when a fellow exile says to Farouk, ‘We glimpse the next world in our dreams anyway; it would be more than that, a dream I’d never awake,’ we feel like we’ve rewritten Stephen Dedalus’ formulation of history and nightmares." - Liam Bishop reviews Donal Ryan's From a Low & Quiet Sea

from Bookmunch http://bit.ly/2IDcnRq
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“We have a writer who is carving out an eminent oeuvre” – From a Low and Quiet Sea by Donal Ryan


via Bookmunch http://bit.ly/2IDcnRq

Heart: A History by Sandeep Jauhar


via A Little Blog of Books http://bit.ly/2XInT1n

“The creeping unease kept me going” – The Water Cure by Sophie Mackintosh

It’s not every debut novelist that gets onto the Man Booker longlist, but then The Water Cure is not any old debut novel: it’s a strange, sinister tale that pulses with the suppressed rage of the powerless and the abused; it’s slow and creeping and full of righteous feminist fury. Which, you know, is probably exactly […]

from Bookmunch http://bit.ly/2URfVG9
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New video by Penguin Books UK on YouTube

GIVEAWAY 🎉 How To Dance The Charleston With Jacqueline Wilson 'Dancing the Charleston' is a brand new Jacqueline Wilson novel, ful...