Some Bookish Cakes

I recently found some delicious looking book cakes online and though I would share some with you. It might give you inspiration to get baking or just make you want cake by either way you will get to see these beautiful decorated cakes. ( None of these cakes are my own but I may try and attempt them !)

Source : themetapicture.com
Source : Pinterest
Source : litstack.com
Source : Pinterest
Source: Pinterest
Source : a very bookish cake, Frankie Magazine

Many Thanks, Caitlin x

(PS please comment your opinion on these cakes !)

Nope Book Tag

  1. Ending: A book ending that made you go NOPE either in denial, rage, or simply because the ending was crappy.

I don’t think any book I have read has had a crappy ending however I do feel that ‘The Lost Witch’ by Melvin Burgess had a little bit of an anti-climactic ending. It didn’t end in the battle that it was built up to be.

the lost witch

 

 

 

  1. Series: A series that turned out to be one huge pile of NOPE. after you’ve invested all of that time and energy on it, or a series you gave up on because it wasn’t worth it anymore.

I think that there has never been a series that I haven’t enjoyed as I tend to read within a genre I really like but I am sure I will come across one! I have however read individual books that I feel this way about as ‘The Lost Island of Tamarind’ by Nadia Aguiar. It was that this book was bad I think that it was just to complex a book at the age i was trying to read it.

the lost island of tamarind

  1. Plot twist: A plot twist you didn’t see coming or didn’t like

I think that ‘Gone Girl’ by Gillian Flynn had a plot twist that I didn’t see coming. The book has a very dramatic ending but I wasn’t quite expecting to end like it did.

gone girl

 

  1. Genre: A genre you will never read.

I wouldn’t ever not read a whole genre of books however I would not necessarily be drawn to romantic books as I find the genre quite predictable. I am aware that it is a generalisation and I would say no to reading a good book within the genre but it wouldn’t  be my first choice.

 

 

  1. Recommendation: A book recommendation that is constantly hyped and pushed at you that you simply refuse to read.

 

When the Hunger Games films first came out I felt that there was a hype around reading the books as well as watching the films however I have never felt the need to read the books. It didn’t help that I didn’t particularly enjoy the Hunger films past the first one.

hunger games

 

  1. Cliche/pet peeve: A cliche or writing pet peeve that always makes you roll your eyes.

I don’t really enjoy reading books that have a ‘love triangle’ within the story as I feel it is very predicatble in most cases. It is also a very common twist to see in books, primarily in the romantic genre.

 

Many thanks, Caitlin x

(PS please comment your Nope Tag thought)

John Green Books

I have previously read three of John Greens books and I really liked them. I have read ‘The Fault in our Stars’, ‘Looking for Alaska’ and ‘Paper towns’. John Green has released many YA novels that look at teenage life in many ways.

the fault in our stars

‘The Fault in our Stars’ is a very well known book and has had a film adaptation made from it. I read the book after the hype of the film came about. Everyone seemed to be raving about the film and I never watched it for ages and decided to read the book instead. I think the book is very well written in a way that it talks about a serious illness yet it isn’t complicated and is romantic. I was sat on the couch one night and read the book in one sitting as I couldn’t put the book down. This book both tackles the highs and lows of being a cancer patient whilst being a novel about teenage romance. I have to admit I did cry upon reading the ending as it was so powerful. This book was very well received with high ratings on websites such as good reads and YA Book Central. It is an emotional rollercoaster that made you laugh, cry and smile and a book I would highly recommend. (PS I never did get round to reading the film)

looking for alaska

Looking for Alaska’ was also a great book and one that I would highly recommend. It looks at a teenage boy is dragged into the world of the new girl at school. It is a well written teenage book and I think it is realistic and easily comprehensible. The characters are interesting and well developed which helps to add to the realism. It is written in a way that is easy to understand and is not complex in a way that would make you think of anything but the intended storyline. It really explores teenage life at a boarding school with a mysterious new pupil.

paper towns

‘Paper towns’ shares the story of two teenagers who go on a midnight adventure and soon one of them becomes a mystery. The one who disappears and left the other trying to find her. But what will he learn along the way? It is well written and does keep you engaged in the story as well. I love the characters however I do feel as though they were a little predictable as they reminded me of the characters in Looking for Alaska, A teenage boy who is trying to reach out to the girl who is unattainable. Saying that they are well developed and intriguing even although they are similar. I think that upon reading other reviews it is not just my opinion that both Looking for Alaska and Paper Towns seems to follow the same formula and although they are different stories they seem to based upon the same plan. However, I would recommend this book but I would just warn you that it is a good book, I would read it again but it is similar to Looking for Alaska.

Overall, I would say from what I have read that John Green is a very good YA author and writes books that do appeal to the target audience and I would recommend the books I have mentioned. I would like to read more of his novels in the future.

Many thanks, Caitlin x

(PS please comment if you have ever read one of John Greens novels or intend to)

Bookish Places I would love to visit

1. Shakespeare & Company Bookstore, Paris

This bookstore was established in 1951 and it is a must-see for booklovers. It is a beautiful and cozy book shop and cafe and if you visit at night you may even stumble across one of its many events.

Shakespeare-and-Company-in-Paris-540x359

 

2. Hay Castle Bookshop, Hay-on-Wye, Wales

In this picturesque town there are a multitude of bookshops worth the visit but specifically the open aired one at Hay Castle. The town is especially worth visiting during Hay Festival of Literature & Arts, held between May and June.

Hay-Castle-Bookshop-picture-1-540x360

3. Livraria Lello & Irmão Bookstore, Porto

This bookstore is considered one of the most beautiful bookstores with it grand staircases and floor to ceiling books. Since it opened in 1906 and has since become an inspiration for any famous writers.

Livraria-Lello-and-Irmao-bookshop-in-Porto-540x343

4. The Brattle Book Shop, Boston

This was established in 1825 and is one of the oldest and largest antiquarian and used bookshops in the USA. In addition to the 3 story building you can also find books outside the building.

The-Brattle-Book-Shop-in-Boston

5. Georgian House Wizard Chambers, London 

This is a 5-star hotel with both rooms for muggles and wizards. The wizard chamber are however the main reason people stay. These rooms give Harry Potter the chance to sleep in a Hogwarts type dormitory.

Georgian-House-Wizard-Chambers-cr-georgian-house

Many  thanks, Caitlin x

(PS please comment if you have ever visited these places or would like to)

 

The Writer’s Toolbox

The Writers Toolbox by Jamie Cat Callan

the writers toolbox

I have previously received a gift from my sister titles ‘The Writers Toolbox’ which helps you to write your stories and how to turn your thoughts into a written story. The box provides help with how to begin your story with the First Sentence sticks, as well as ways to help you develop a plot twist. There are also helpful tips on how to add drama to your stories and allow you to make your work more exciting if you are struggling. There are also a deck of ‘Sixth Sense’ cards which aid with phrases that need that extra bit of description.

the writers toolbox factors

I think that this box is very helpful as I find writing quite difficult and especially find it hard to start a story. I think that I have a good imagination for being an author however I don’t have the confidence or skill to write a good story and I think this box is very helpful at beginning my writing.

There is also a book inside the box which I found very interesting as it is split into helpful parts such as how to use the toolbox and how to keep going when you are struggling. I think that this is extremely helpful and is the best part of the box. It is motivational and inspiring to read whilst trying to write your first or one of the first stories.

Many thanks, Caitlin x

(PS please feel free to comment whether you have ever used a tool like this to help you out whilst writing)

Douglas Skelton Q&A

Douglas Skelton is a Scottish crime writer who writes both fiction and non-fiction that look at the darker side of things. He is known for his Davie McCall series and the Dominic Queste books. I have previously written about his book ‘Tag – You’re Dead’ whohc I found was very enaging and enjoyable to read. His books are mainly based in Scotland and I think this makes me like them further as I am Scottish.

Douglas Skelton has kindly offered to answer a few questions which I greatly appreciate and I am thankful.

Q&A

  1. What made you become an author?

I think the yen to write was always there. I can recall at age seven or eight lying on the floor of our flat in Springburn in Glasgow, writing a crime story called ‘Who Killed Cock Robin?’ about the murder of a TV presenter on camera. Years later I discovered Ed McBain had made a far better job of the same idea. In school I wrote plays and in English class what they called compositions always became some kind of horror or crime story. Then, after a spotty employment career, I drifted into journalism and made stuff up for a living.

 

  1. Were you influenced by any specific author or book?

I’ve already mentioned Ed McBain. His 87th Precinct novels were – and still are – an incredible influence on my approach to storytelling. He threaded humour through his work and I do the same. He also liked dialogue and so do I. He introduced tiny little characters who sprang off the page, full-blown, and I attempt that, too. I think also his economy, he didn’t mess around, and I like that in a crime novel or thriller.

 

  1. Why did you choose to write in the crime/mystery genre?

I’ll do anything if they pay me! Seriously, I think it’s just something that’s in me. A dark side, if you like. I’m a storyteller and that kind of story attracts me. I’d also like to try my hand at a western, though.

Crime is the genre I read more than any others, beginning with Ed McBain. Horror has long since become less interesting to me. I could never get into fantasy. Sci fi was a passing fad for me. Literary novels bore me to tears (sorry, literary folk, but they do). But crime and mystery covers such a wide platform that there’s always something of interest for me.

 

  1. Regarding the Dominic Queste books, what made you decide to make the main character of Dominic Queste have a comedic/smartaspect to his personality?

I had just come off the four Davie McCall novels – Blood City, Crow Bait, Devil’s Knock and Open Wounds – and they were pretty dark. They still had humour in them, of course, but the overall tone was dark. Also, Davie was hard to write because everything about him was internal. Most of the other characters in the series thought he was one thing – tough, dangerous, not someone you’d invite to tea – but the reader knew that he was pretty vulnerable. He was taciturn to the point of being monosyllabic at times and I like dialogue. So Dominic Queste was the antidote. He runs off at the mouth, that engine is running even when his brain isn’t in gear, and it gets him into trouble. I also put a lot of myself into him. Like me, he’s a big movie fan and he listens to film scores. And not all of his jokes work. But also, it’s an extension of the traditional private eye – even though he calls himself an odd job man. Smart mouthed, often cynical, heart of mush.

 

  1. Why did you decide to set your books in Scotland?

Well, I am Scottish, simple as that. I know the place. And when I started writing non-fiction, the so-called Tartan Noir explosion hadn’t taken place. Yes, William McIlvanney had given us Laidlaw, Peter Turnbull (who is English) had created the P Division series and Ian Rankin and Val McDermid were being published but that was more or less it. When I belatedly turned to fiction, I used all I’d learned through true crime and actually investigating it for Glasgow solicitors to hopefully make it seem as real as I needed it to be. Then I threw it all out for Dominic Queste! However, my next book – The Janus Run, out in September – is set in New York. It’s a gamble.

 

  1. Do you have a favourite book that you have ever written?

Each book I write is my favourite, certainly until I start the next one. I’m proud of just about every book I’ve written (not them all, there is one I despise. It was written at a bad time in my life and it’s the only one I’ve ever done purely for cash). I do have a particular affection for the Davie McCall series, particularly ‘Open Wounds’, which was longlisted for the first McIlvanney Prize for a Scottish crime book. I’m very, very proud that it was selected. I like the mixture of darkness and light – my Celtic blood is drawn to the darkness, I think. I’d like to return to Davie’s world some day.

 

  1. What process do you go through when writing a new book? Does that differ between fiction and non-fiction?

My process for fiction is this – I have a notion, I start writing. Sometimes I see it through to the end, sometimes I lose interest and give up. I have a number of projects I’ve started and then given up. I don’t plan. I don’t work anything out in detail. I might have an idea for an ending, but not always. I usually have an opening, perhaps a couple of points I want to hit, but beyond that I simply free the rabbit and see which way it jumps.

The non-fiction was different because I was guided by the facts. Yes, I lathered a sheen of storytelling on top but in the end I knew which way things were going to go because they had already happened.

 

  1. Do you have a favourite ever author/book?

I have a lot of favourite authors – Ed McBain (surprise! Bet you didn’t see that coming), Dennis Lehane, Robert Crais, John Connolly, William Goldman. There are, of course, lot of Scottish authors who are very good, too many to mention and not all of them are friends of mine (in case you wondered).

As for a favourite book, this varies. I used to say ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ but there are others, so many others, that I hold in high regard, some by the authors I mentioned above, some not.

 

  1. Do you have any recommendations on what to read in the crime/mystery genre?

Yes – anything by me. I’m wonderful. I’m kidding (no, I’m not).

I swear by the authors I’ve already mentioned but there are so many other good books out there.

My friends Caro Ramsay, Michael J. Malone, Neil Broadfoot, Theresa Talbot, Mark Leggatt, Denzil Meyrick, Mason Cross all produce fabulous work. Far too good, if you ask me. But the list goes on – Quintin Jardine, Alex Gray, Lin Anderson, Craig Robertson, Gordon ‘GJ’ Brown, TF Muir, James Oswald – all great writers. I’ll have forgotten someone, I’m sure…

 

  1. Finally, what advice do you have for aspiring writers and/or avid readers of crime fiction? Do you have any tips?

To be a writer you need a number of qualities.

Perseverance – you need to learn to keep at it, no matter what.

The ability to take criticism – I know you think your work is perfect but really, it isn’t. Listen to constructive criticism, act on it.

The ability to take advice – you don’t always know best.

The ability to roll with the punches – you’ll be rejected. Not everyone will like what you write. People will be mean, especially on line. Don’t let the latter get to you.

For readers, please remember that no one sets out to write a bad book. Just because you don’t like something doesn’t necessarily mean it’s bad, it’s just not to your taste. Also remember that authors have feelings, too. The author has been labouring with this story for upwards of a year in one way or another. By all means post a review – we not only welcome them but we need them – but please don’t be vicious. Be constructive in your criticism. Although we much prefer being told how wonderful we are.

And if you do post a review, please read the book first. I saw a review recently of a book (not one of mine) that the reviewer admitted not reading! Strange, but true.

Many thanks, Caitlin x

(PS please feel free to comment whether you enjoyed this blog post)

Bookshelf Scavenger Hunt

  1. Find and author name or title with a Z in it.

I don’t think I have one

2. Find a classic.

alice in wonderland 

 

Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carol

 

3. Find a book with a key on it.

13treasures

 

 

The Thirteen Treasures by Michelle Harrison

4. Find something on your bookshelf that is not a book.

A tin of teabags

5. Find the oldest book on your shelf.

secret garden

 

A 1970s edition of The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett

6. Find a book with a girl on it.

Girl stolen

 

 

Girl, Stolen  by April Henry

7. Find a book that has an animal in it.

An_elephant_in_the_garden

 

 

An Elephant in the Garden by Michael Morpurgo

8. Find a book with a male protagonist.

othello

 

 

Othello by William Shakespeare

9. Find a book with only words on the cover.

The Killing Lessons Saul Black (google books)

 

 

The killing Lessons by Saul Black?

10. Find a book with illustrations in it.

All my Roald Dahl Books

11. Find a book with gold lettering.

alice and others

 

 

Alice in Wonderland & other stories by Lewis Carol

 

12. Find a diary, true or fictional.

I don’t think I have any diaries

 

13. Find a book written by an author with a common name (like Smith).

paper towns

 

 

Paper Towns  by John Green

14. Find a book with a close up of something on it.

the escape

 

 

The Escape by David Baldacci (close up of handcuffs)

15. Find a book on your shelf that takes place in the earliest time period.

othello

 

 

Othello by William Shakespeare

16. Find a hardcover book without a jacket.

a visual journey

 

 

A Visual Journey by Ed Sheeran

17. Find a teal/turquoise colored book.

rise of the isle of the lost

 

Rise of the Isle of the Lost by De la Cruz

18. Find a book with stars on it.

fairy dust

 

 

Fairy Dust by Gwyneth Rees

 

 

  1. Find a non YA book.

all quiet on the western frontAll Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque

 

 

 

 

Many thanks, Caitlin x

(PS please feel free to comment your book tag)

The Book Blogger Tag

What are your top three book pet hates?
When the front cover is bent or folded over, when you are collecting a series and they change the cover style, books with really, really long chapters.

Describe your perfect reading spot
My bed or a comfy couch with a cup of tea.

Tell us three book confessions
I have everyone one of the Hannah Montana books, I love the feel of flicking through the pages f a book, ­­­I have only read 3 autobiographies.

When was the last time you cried at a book?
When I read the Fault in our Stars (2014)

How many books are on your bedside table
One plus my Kindle

What is your favourite snack whist you’re reading
Tea and any kind of chocolate

Name three books you’d recommend to everyone
Between shades of gray by Ruta Sepetys, Slow Horses by Mick Herron, The abomination by Jonathan Holt

What books are on your favourite shelf on your bookcase

all the books from when I was younger because it is filled with memories.

Write how much books mean to you in 3 words
I love books

What’s your biggest reading secret?
I have never read all the Harry Potter books

Many Thanks, Caitlin x

(PS please feel free to comment your book blogger tag)

Being a Bookworm

book-club-book-worm source twitter reading4pleasure
Source: Twitter – @reading4pleasure

I have always loved to read and I have always looked for new books to read like many people my age and older.

However, when I begun high school I did read a lot less and lost my interest a little bit. I think it was due to trying to come to terms with such a big change going from primary to secondary school. I also think that making new friends and suddenly having a ton of homework in comparison to primary was a contributor.

I don’t think I am the only one that feels as through high school or higher education has gotten in the way of reading and therefore people lose interest. I fortunately didn’t lose interest completely and I got back into it in my last few years of high school and now college. I also believe that when people go onto college or university a lot if things can get in the way and they have other priorities. Getting a huge workload and meeting up with new friends as well as often having a part time job. I personally always take the time to read something before I go to sleep. I go to college and have a part time job so there isn’t always time to read during the day and so I always read a little before I go to sleep. Even if it is a sentence, paragraph or chapter I have to read something otherwise I feel like I haven’t accomplished anything. I must read a part of the book I am reading each day and then I feel like I have completed something that day if I hadn’t anywhere else in the day. It relaxes me and makes me feel less stressed.

I think that your social group can be a big influence on if you continue to read or not. It you are constantly going out or meeting up with friends it’s a great time but that often takes over from reading, which isn’t a bad thing. It allows you to grow as a person and enjoy life in that way. I personally have a group of friends who during my first few years of high school took up most of my time and I am greatly thankful for that however as we grew older everyone had more of their own things to do such as homework and family time. That allows you to take the time to read a little more and it did for me even although we would still meet up and see each other at school every day.

Overall , I would say that if I wasn’t reading I would feel a void in my life as I love exploring other worlds and becoming involved in the storylines. Not everyone feels like this and in my family it’s a great example. My big sister always loved to read and I think partly that’s why I do but on the other hand my twin sister could think of 1000 other things to do before picking a book up to read but I personally would recommend reading to everyone. I think it is just the case of finding the perfect genre or author or book that is powerful enough to get that individual into reading.

Many thanks, Caitlin x

(PS feel free to comment your thoughts of being a bookworm or if you aren’t)