Tag: Imprint

Lucy Cruickshanks – The Trader of Saigon | Review

Title: The Trader of Saigon

Author: Lucy Cruickshanks

Type: Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 336

Rating: 4*/5

 

Lucy Cruikshanks - The Trader of Saigon

Lucy Cruickshanks – The Trader of Saigon

 

I picked this book up because I’m running an indie readalong with my friend Todd the Librarian on BookTube, but I realised after I started reading this that it doesn’t really qualify. It’s published by Heron Books, an imprint of Quercus, and it’s quite clearly been professionally edited and put through rigorous quality checks before it’s made it out on to the market. It’s professionally done, and rightly so.

This is technically historical fiction, because it’s set in Vietnam at some point during the mid-to-late twentieth century. It’s after the war, but before the country’s had time to heal. As for the plot, it’s surprisingly hard to talk about that without giving away spoilers. What I will say is that it involves people trafficking amidst the paranoid backdrop of communist Vietnam, and a dude called Phuc makes some very bad decisions after finding a gambling den.

Cruickshanks’ writing style is accessible and easy to read which means that it’s the kind of book that can just wash over you. She’s also fantastic at creating a sense of place, and it really kicks in right from the opening pages. You can almost taste the food and smell the markets. Cruickshanks has spent some time in Vietnam, of course, but simply spending time somewhere doesn’t necessarily mean you can write about it. Lucy can, and that’s a talent.

 

Lucy Cruikshanks

Lucy Cruickshanks

 

Sure, there were bits here and there that dragged a little, but that happens with most books. But the good outweighs the bad, and I enjoyed this quite a lot overall. I might not remember the finer details in six months’ time, but it certainly kept me turning the pages right up to the end. When it comes to a book, what more can you ask for?

Will I read the next one? Maybe. There are so many books and so little time. But I’d like to.

 

Saigon

Saigon

 

Click here to buy The Trader of Saigon.


Pembroke Sinclair – Life After the Undead | Review

Title: Life After the Undead

Author: Pembroke Sinclair

Type: Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 252

Rating: 8/10

 

Pembroke Sinclair - Life After the Undead

Pembroke Sinclair – Life After the Undead

 

Disclaimer: Pembroke Sinclair is published by the Forsaken imprint of Booktrope, the same publisher which released my debut novella, No Rest for the Wicked.

Life After the Undead is a bit of an anomaly, because it subverts the zombie genre in ways that I didn’t expect. Sinclair has also penned a non-fiction book under her real name, Jessica Robinson, called Undead Obsessed: Finding Meaning in Zombies, and so you can be sure that she’s already done her homework. But what’s most notable to me is that this is almost post-post-apocalyptic – the zombie apocalypse has already happened, and Sinclair’s survivors have started to live with the situation. They have to.

So what happens after the zombie apocalypse happens? Well, seventeen-year-old Krista is about to find out, and she turns out to be surprisingly adaptive when it comes to dealing with the zombie hordes. In fact, in many ways, the zombies in this book aren’t much of a problem – it’s other survivors that you want to look out for, especially in Liet’s compound. But I don’t want to say any more than that, in case I ruin the story.

Overall, I thought the start could have been stronger, but once I got sucked into the story, I was hooked. Sinclair has also left room for a sequel, or perhaps even a series – it’ll be interesting to see how it pans out.

 

Pembroke Sinclair

Pembroke Sinclair

 

Click here to buy Life After the Undead.