Wednesday, 16 January 2019

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A Beach to Walk On by ET is one of my favourite zines for re-reading, and is really a bit of a comfort read. It's absolutely, perfectly slash, and it's angst and partner-worry and partner-comfort and most importantly just the right amount of those things rather than tipping into soppiness and unlikelihood!

It's set after Mixed Doubles, and the lads are actually given the two weeks off that Cowley has promised them. Bodie decides that what they need - what Doyle needs, but what he needs too - is some time away from the job together, where they can just be themselves with someone else who understands them. So he hijacks Doyle, who's having trouble coming to terms with those dum-dums, and they head off down to the Dorset coast.

They both try... )
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ChasingTheLight-JesseBlackadder 0 2019 Mount TBR challengebanner NewToYouAuthor Lj BookBingo Card
Mount TBR so far = 2/24

It's the early 1930s. Antarctic open-sea whaling is booming and a territorial race for the mysterious continent is in full swing. Aboard a ship setting sail from Cape Town carrying the Norwegian whaling magnate Lars Christensen are three women. Lillemor Rachlew, who tricked her way onto the ship and will stop at nothing to be the first woman to land on Antarctica; Mathilde Wegger, a grieving widow who's been forced to join the trip by her calculating parents-in-law; and Lars' wife, Ingrid Christensen, who has longed to travel to Antarctica since she was a girl and has made a daunting bargain with Lars to convince him to take her.

As they head south through icy waters, the race is on for the first woman to land on Antarctica. None of them expect the outcome and none of them know how they will be changed by their arrival.

Based on the little-known true story of the first woman to ever set foot on Antarctica, Jesse Blackadder has captured the drama, danger and magnetic pull of exploring uncharted places in our world and our minds.


I absolutely loved this book - it's beautifully written, about something amazing, and every character and place is real and interesting and worth reading about. I can't believe that it was so hard to get hold of (we were supposed to read it for book group in MK last year, but gave up because it just wasn't practical), because it's just that good. It follows the lives of the three women, and is very real about them - they're not made out to be paragons or heroines or anything other than real people in an extraordinary situation, and that's a measure of quality - and equality in a book for me. It follows the paths of their lives as they struggle to be who they want to be against early 1900s mores, and are ultimately thrown together on this journey to the Antarctic. The Antarctic, of course, is another character entirely - mysterious and elusive and ultimately just as real as any of the others.

I've used this book for the New to You Author square on my Bingo card, because I have every intention of finding more books by Blackadder (she's written one about Mary Queen of Scots too - apparently she was fed up with people asking whether she was related to Rowan Atkinson, went to visit Scotland to find out more about the real Blackadder family - she's Australian, by the way - and ended up writing The Raven's Heart)

Booklist 2019 so far )

Hold Your Breath, Sunshine


A ship is safe in the harbour - but that's not what ships are for.

~o~

I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night. (Sarah Williams)

~o~

Could've.
Should've.
Would've.
Didn't. Didn't. Didn't.

~o~

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