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Book Club: A good book. A glass of wine. All is fine with the world!

Lesley Pearse’s autobiography, The Long and Winding Road, is as incredible as her bestselling fiction … from being found playing coatless in the snow while her mum lay dead in the house to a teenage pregnancy … and finally marriage and children and a career as bestselling author. Michael Joseph • In André Aciman’s The Gentleman From Peru, a group of college friends meet a fellow guest at the luxurious hotel on the Amalfi Coast, where they’re marooned. A stranger – in more ways than one! Faber

• Is there anything better than a new Marian Keyes?  Yes. When it’s a new MK about the Walsh family. This one centres around Anna, but with loads of catch-ups with Claire and Helen and Margaret, Rachel and Luke, Mammy Walsh (as dramatic as ever), even the Real Men (remember them).

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And the tortured but gorgeous Joey. It’s just pure MK joy … when she wants to emphasise something she uses italics … all the time, which is just wonderful. Loved, loved, loved My Favourte Mistake. Book of the month! Penguin

 

Thrills and chills

A black man accused of killing an elderly, wealthy white couple. In the tumultuous year of 1968 in southern Virginia, the odds are already against him, and his white lawyer. A courtroom, Civil Rights, a prosecution’s deliberate march towards a guilty verdict and the electric chair … no one does this better than David Baldacci. Two murders, two suspects and A Calamity of Souls. Macmillan

If most men say they’re one of the good guys, why are so many women afraid to walk alone at night? A husband whose wife has just left him, a reclusive artist living in a scary cottage, two young women who go missing … One of the Good Guys is Araminta Hall’s novel about what happens when women have had enough! Macmillan

Abigail Dean’s Girl A was superb, as is her second chilling, gripping thriller. From it’s devastating, heartbreaking opening, Day One keeps you racing along, ducking twists at every turn. A lie. A media frenzy. Conspiracy theories. A small community changed forever … with families torn apart. The novel, explains the author, was inspired by her long fascination with conspiracy theories … the people who believe them, the people who peddle them, and the people they destroy! Hemlock Press

 

Wild reads

The Hawks, SA’s elite crime-fighting force, have put scores of our worst criminals behind bars. In Hunting With The Hawks, investigative journalist Graham Coetzer gives a glimpse of the secretive world of this police unit. Tafelberg

Pursuing a dream instilled by David Attenborough’s television adventurers, as a young man Larry Patterson is advised to become a veterinary surgeon – his first step towards a career working with wild animals in Africa. Aiming to Save tells his story of finding adventure in Botswana … as a vet, ecologist, survey pilot, game capture operator, hunter and then passionate conservationist. Rockhopper Books

Painting a Life In Africa is the story of Joan van Gogh – a direct descendant of artist Vincent – who has lived an unusual and adventurous life close to nature. Born in bedpan during a locust storm was just the start of it … she explored some of the most remote and secretive spots in southern Africa. Warm and full of humour. Rockhopper Books

For the CEO in hiking boots and the adventurer in a suit … here’s one showing how to use adventure principles in business. Johan de Villiers flits between crocodile-infested waters and high-stakes corporate decision making in Overlanding Through the Boardroom, offering the thrill seekers, the sole entrepreneur and the season large corporation executives a philosophical compass to navigate the unpredictable wilderness and the complex corporate world. Rockhopper Books

All books available at Exclusive Books.

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