Spring reads and a whisky cocktail

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Three couples. One’s planning a very extravagant wedding at the chicest hotel on a tiny Scottish Island. The next is a woman who’s taken a job with the said chicest hotel and her American boss fiancé, who’re trying to arrange their own wedding. And lastly there’s the local headmistress and the doctor, who’re desperately trying to keep their relationship a secret. Then, throw into Jenny Colgan’s An Island Wedding an assortment of children and relatives and one glorious midsummer night and you’ve a funny, heart-warming happily-ever-after book club read. Sphere • More escapism, love and glamour in The Hotel Nantucket. Reeling from a break-up, Lizbet takes over as general manager of Hotel Nantucket. All she needs do to return this gem back to it’s former glory is win over the billionaire owner, get a popular Insta influencer on her side, and shake of a scandal nearly 100 years old. Great fun, as always with Elin Hilderbrand’s books. Hodder and Stoughton

This Spring’s book club we’re serving TOOR – a brand new, locally made whisky. Aged five years, the whisky is the first from a collective from Redford Beverages and Doña (which means woman of rank) Distillery … the craft distillery run by Daniella Schoeman. TOOR’s is rich and smooth, with flavours of vanilla and roasted oak, nutty caramel and stone-fruit palate, and hints of maple and earth. About the serve, Danielle says “It’s simply the one you enjoy best: neat, on the rocks, in a cocktail, with a mixer, or with a splash of water.” You’ll find it for R299.99 at your local bottle store.

 

New on the bookshelves …


The Infinity Pool by Claire S Lewis … An inherited Tuscan farmhouse promises swimming in the pool, sipping wine, sitting out under the stars. Instead it results in a body in the pool and long-buried secrets coming to the surface. Head of Zeus • Akwaeke Emezi’s You Made A Fool Of Death With Your Beauty … Five years after Feyl’s husband died, it’s almost time to start dating again. She’s not really ready for anything serious, but a hot, fast and furious encounter at a rooftop party leads to a dream island holiday. All’s dandy, until she falls for the one man who’s definitely off limits. A brilliant read, which should come with a prude-warning … it’s steamy. Faber
Summer at Primrose Tower by Annie Robertson … A florist takes on the biggest wedding of her career, but it’s difficult to focus when the charming local doctor keeps distracting her. A light and feel-good love story. Welbeck • Double Booked by Lily Lindon … Two lives are twice as much fun. A young girl with a steady boyfriend is stuck in a rut, until she auditions for a famous lesbian pop band, she finds their drummer really hot! May she be bisexual? Throwing her strict schedule out of the window, she splits herself in two, alternating between the safety of her old life and the freedom of her new one. Head of Zeus • Catherine Mangan’s One Italian Summer … A wedding on a island, a break up and job loss and the beginnings of a love … all wrapped up in a glorious and uplifting escapist novel set against the backdrop of the Italian Coast. Bliss! Sphere • Yinka, Where Is Your Husband? by Lizzie Damilola Blackburn … A hilarious tale about Yinka, who wants to find love, but her mum – and many aunties – want to find it for her. Family, friendship, love and massive dose of good humour. Penguin • The Tea Ladies of St Jude’s Hospital by Joanna Nell … Three unlikely friends must put aside their many difference to keep the hospital’s cafeteria where the work open. An hilarious, uplifting, feel good story about friendship and kindness. Hodder and Stoughton. All available from exclusivebooks.co.za

Nilopar Uddin’s The Halfways, moving between London, Wales, New York and Bangladesh, is family drama that explores the relationships of mothers and daughters, of fathers and daughters, of sisterhood, of forgiveness. Harper Collins UK • A beautiful chateau in the South of France. A stunning escort, who has to convince guests that she’s not a paid escort, but a real girlfriend. For what she plans to be her last job, it sounds easy. Until she arrives and finds that not everything is as it seems, and one of the guests is an old acquaintance who knows too much about her. In Adele Parks’ (love her books) One Last Secret, the question is, would you kill to keep it? Harper Collins UK

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