Captivating Book Recommendations by Freya North | Discover Hidden Gems

Read This: Books under the Radar is a weekly post written by a guest author – often a friend of mine, someone I’ve met on my writerly travels, or an author I admire who recommends three books they think deserve more recognition. If you’re interested in buying any of the books, please click on the covers and give these hidden gems some love.

Read This: Freyer North

Freyer North is the author of a great many novels and an amazing supporter of other authors. She hosts a brilliant Live series on Instagram called Wednesday Writers where she chats to a published author about their books and writing, and it’s worth watching. I met her in real life at Society of Women Writers and Journalists in London where we bonded over tea and an excess of scones. Here’s what she has to say about herself:

Freya North has written 16 novels, exploring the emotion and complexities of everyday relationships and families including The Turning Point, Little Wing and The Unfinished Business of Eadie Browne. A sense of place is crucial to her work. Never a backdrop, always a leading character, her novels have been set in New England, British Columbia, North Yorkshire, Derbyshire, Norfolk and the Outer Hebrides. Freya holds degrees in History of Art from the University of Manchester and the Courtauld Institute, London. She founded and ran the Hertford Children’s Book Festival and is an ambassador for Bowel Cancer UK. You can find more about her on her website, and on Instagram.

Here are Freya’s recommendations:

Continue reading

3 Hidden Gem Book Recommendations: Vanessa Harbour’s Picks

Read This: Books under the Radar is a weekly post written by a guest author – often a friend of mine, someone I’ve met on my writerly travels, or an author I admire who recommends three books they think deserve more recognition. If you’re interested in buying any of the books, please click on the covers and give these hidden gems some love.

Read This: Vanessa Harbour

Vanessa is one of those lovely writers I seem to have known forever, often popping up at my local independent book shop, at other authors’ launches and events. She is incredibly supportive and encouraging of other authors and she must make the most wonderful mentor. Here’s what she has to say about herself:

Vanessa Harbour is a disabled author and Programme Leader of the BA in Creative Writing at the University of Winchester. She has also mentored aspiring writers for many years, acting as editor and workshop leader. History fascinates her. Her novels Flight and Safe combine her passion for horses and the Second World War. She loves to use words to paint pictures through storytelling. Follow Vanessa on Instagram.

All three of the books I’ve chose have something in common. They’re driven by characters and family whether the one you’re born into or the one you create around you.

Here are Vanessa’s recommendations:

Continue reading

Discover Bombay and Beyond: Must-Read Books by Susmita Bhattacharya

Read This is a weekly post written by a guest author – often a friend of mine, or someone I’ve met on my writerly travels, who recommends three books that they think deserve more recognition. If you’re interested in buying any of the books, click on the covers and give these hidden gems some love.

Read This: Susmita Bhattacharya

Susmita, a friend and fellow author is in one of my writing groups. We meet every month to read each other’s work and comment on it, so I’m very privileged to get to read Susmita’s writing long before it’s even published. And I’m delighted that her choices come in South Asian Heritage month, which celebrates all things South Asian. Here’s a bit more about her:

Susmita Bhattacharya is an Indian-born writer whose debut novel, The Normal State of Mind (Parthian) was longlisted at the Mumbai Film Festival, 2018. Her short story collection, Table Manners (Dahlia Publishing) won the Saboteur Award for Best Short Story Collection and was serialised on BBC Radio 4 Extra. She mentors underrepresented writers through the Middle Way Mentoring Scheme and is co-founder of the Write Beyond Borders Mentoring Project and the ACE funded ‘Bridges not Borders’ project. She is a multidisciplinary artist who does several projects in schools and the community in the Solent region.

Follow her on Instagram or on X or Instagram. Here are Susmita’s recommendations:

Continue reading

Discover Three Unique Reads: Mrs. Caliban, Cinema Love, City of Laughter

Read This is a weekly post written by a guest author – often a friend of mine, or someone I’ve met on my writerly travels, who recommends three books they think deserve more recognition. If you’re interested in buying any of the books, please click on the covers and give these hidden gems some love.

Read This: Gina Chung

Gina and I met when we were put together because we’d both written books that featured octopuses – hers being the wonderful Sea Change, about a woman called Ro whose only real friend is a Pacific Octopus called Delores. She interviewed me about mine – The Memory of Animals at McNally Jackson, a gorgeous bookshop in New York. Here’s what she has to say about herself:

Gina Chung is a Korean American writer from New Jersey currently living in New York City. She is the author of the novel Sea Change, which was longlisted for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize, a 2023 B&N Discover Pick, an APALA Adult Fiction Honor Book, and a New York Times Most Anticipated Book, and the short story collection Green Frog, which was a Good Morning America Book Buzz Pick. A recipient of the Pushcart Prize, she is a 2021-2022 Center for Fiction/Susan Kamil Emerging Writer Fellow and holds an MFA in fiction from The New School.

Here are Gina’s recommendations:

Continue reading

Claire Fuller’s Republished Novels with Stunning New Covers by Penguin

Today, 1st August 2024 my first three novels are being republished by Penguin with lovely new covers to match in a green-ish way with Unsettled Ground and The Memory of Animals. And green happens to be my favourite colour. They were all designed by in-house designer Josie Stavely Taylor, but feature artworks by different artists on the covers.

I think they’re all gorgeous. Do you have a favourite?

My debut, Our Endless Numbered Days features a photograph by Caroliina Norontaus. It won the Desmond Elliot Prize for debut fiction, and is about Peggy, who in 1976 at age eight, is taken by her father to a remote European Forest and she isn’t seen again for another nine years.

Swimming Lessons has a painting by Paul Rouphail on the cover. It was shortlisted for the Encore Award for second novels. It’s about Ingrid, who write letters to her husband and hides them in the books he collects, before disappearing from a Dorset beach, and her daughter, Flora who wants to find out what happened to her mother.

Bitter Orange has a painting by Shaun Downey on the cover. The novel has recently been optioned for film / TV, and it’s about 39-year-old Francis who is commissioned to survey the follies in the gardens of an English country house in 1969. Once there she falls in love with a bohemian couple, with dire consequences.

If you decide to buy any of these, whether from your local independent bookshop (and thank you if you do) or online, you might have to specify that you’d like to receive the new cover.

Must-Read Books Recommended by Lindsay Hunter

Read This is a weekly post written by a guest author – often a friend of mine, someone I’ve met on my writerly travels, or an author I admire who recommends three books* they think deserve more recognition. If you’re interested in buying any of the books, please click on the covers and give these hidden gems some love.

Read This: Lindsay Hunter

Lindsay and I met in 2023 when she interviewed me about my novel, The Memory of Animals as part of the US book tour for the book, at the wonderful bookshop in Chicago, Exile in Bookville. She was (is) so lovely and enthusiastic and funny, that we’ve stayed in touch. She gave me a proof of her latest novel, Hot Springs Drive, and unsurprisingly I loved this too, wrote her a quote for the cover and posted a mini review of it on Instagram. I highly recommend it. Here’s what she has to say about herself:

(*Why am I not surprised that Lindsay cheated and gave me four recommendations?)

I’m Lindsay Hunter, author of five books. My latest novel, Hot Springs Drive, was named one of the best thrillers of 2023 by the Washington Post. I host I’m a Writer But, a podcast about writers and their lives. I live in Chicago with my family. 

I’m excited to recommend the following books to you! These are titles that have stayed with me ever since I had the pleasure of reading them. They inspire me in my own writing, and show me that there are no limits, only those I’ve imposed on myself. Also, and this is important: they are a blast to read.

Here are Lindsay’s recommendations:

Continue reading

Discover Hidden Gems: Book Picks by Juliet West

Read This is a weekly post written by a guest author – often a friend of mine, or someone I’ve met on my writerly travels, who recommends three books that they think deserve more recognition. If you’re interested in buying any of the books, click on the covers and give these hidden gems some love.

Read This: Juliet West

I got to know Juliet through the Prime Writers – a group of authors who were first published over the age of forty. The website and the Twitter account have fallen away but the friendships remain. Juliet was also in my writing group for a while and I’ve always been a fan of her writing. Here’s a bit more about her:

Juliet West is the author of two novels Before the Fall (Pan Macmillan, 2014) and The Faithful (Pan Macmillan, 2017). Her short stories and poetry have been published in various magazines and anthologies including The French Literary Review, The Sunday Times and the Sunday Express.

You can find more about her on her website or on X/Twitter. Here are Juliet’s recommendations:

Continue reading

Join the International Instagram Giveaway for One Ukrainian Summer and The Memory of Animals

I’m hosting a Giveaway on Instagram for a signed copy of Viv Groskop’s memoir, One Ukrainian Summer, and a signed copy of the paperback of The Memory of Animals. To enter visit my Instagram account: www.instagram.com/writerclairefuller, find my post with this image and follow the instructions.

The Giveaway is open to everyone no matter where you live, and closes on 21st July.

I’ve just finished reading One Ukrainian Summer and I loved it! It’s an account of a year in the 1990s when Viv travelled to Russia as part of her university degree. Age twenty, she works in St. Petersburg teaching English, and falls in love with a Ukrainian rock star. Things are not as she expects when she travels to his home in Ukraine to see him on stage. It’s funny and sweet, and so interesting to read about Russia just after it stopped being the USSR.

Enter the Giveaway.

Read This: Unsung Contemporary Fiction – Recommended Reads by a University Librarian

Each week I’ve started by saying that Read This is a post written by a guest author, but this time we have a guest librarian. As those who read Claire’s and Tim’s Favourite Reads each year, know, my #LibrarianHusband always like to have his say, and when he heard that I was planning Read This, he wanted to be included and how could I say no. As ever, these are three books that he thinks deserve more recognition. If you’re interested in buying any of the books, please on the covers and give these hidden gems some love.

Read This: Tim Chapman

Here’s the disclaimer if you skimmed my note above: Tim isn’t an author, he’s a librarian and he’s my husband. Here’s a bit more about him:

I’m a University Librarian and prolific reader.

Authors need a lot of space and there’s only room for one in my household – I’m married to the host of the “Read this” series, Claire Fuller. I have a soft spot for short stories and Claire and I often read short story collections to each other. I read almost exclusively contemporary fiction – lots of it American, and also lots in translation (as you can see below). I like fiction about real people living real lives in real places, often when things go sour. Despite that, I’m generally a happy chap.

Continue reading