Thursday, 29 May 2025

Saving Missy - Never too late!

Saving Missy, by Beth Morrey, features seventy-nine year old Missy Carmichael who is a prickly, stubborn and incredibly lonely woman. She lives alone in a large house and misses her beloved son and grandson who lives in Australia. She also has a daughter, but their relationship has broken down and she longs for Leo, her husband, to help mend fences, but he's not there (we eventually find out why much later in the book). One day, Missy has a chance encounter with two women and a boy in the local park who transform her life. She slowly starts to come out of her shell and involve herself in the world again, especially when she agrees to look after a dog called Bob ... just for a couple of days! The couple of days turns into weeks and months and Missy tells the dog about all her troubles and feels the companionship that her new furry lodger brings her. Through her new found friends (both the 2- and 4-legged varieties), we hear about Missy's early life, meeting her husband and how she sacrificed her own career for raising a family. We slowly see Missy come back out of her isolated shell and find herself again after all these years. She positively blossoms and, despite a few set backs, she sees hope for the future. This is a lovely book and Missy is a great character. Her friends, Sylvie and Angela, do stretch credibility a little ... if only the world was full of these types of people ... but they create an enjoyable and lively counterpoint to Missy's long-established stillness (at the start). Not earth shattering, but the story is interesting and you definitely become invested and keen to know what happens to Missy. This could be, in part, due to the fantastic narration by Harriet Walter in the audio edition that I used. A good holiday read.

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 400 print pages.

Price I paid: £3.99.

Formats available: print, unabridged audio, ebook.


Saturday, 10 May 2025

The Year 1000 - snapshot of history

The Year 1000, by Robert Lacey and Danny Danziger is a look at what life was like for English people at the turn of the first millennium. Based around the Julian Calendar, it features a month per chapter. We follow the seasons and activities of everyday folk that were key to life at the time, but set against the background of the political goings on ... and there were a few! Full of interesting facts about farming, medicine, church, kings and queens, and how places got their names ... just to name a few ... this book will probably annoy anyone you live or work with as you share with them the latest nugget of information that has been presented to you. Life was tough and often short, but people were not starving - indeed, it may surprise many that people's stature was pretty much as it is today. Christendom loomed large in everyone's lives, but as the millennium approached, there were prophets of doom everywhere (maybe they were a 1000 years too early!!!). Also, fast approaching over the horizon were the abacus and the concept of infinity and zero ... after which, life would never be the same again. Written in an easy to understand style, but without being patronising or too simplistic, this is a great book for anyone who likes their history in bite size pieces.

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 240 print pages.

Price I paid: free, was a present.

Formats available: print, abridged audio download, abridge audio cassette.