How to Kill a Witch by Claire Mitchell and Zoe Venditozzi
This combines a well-researched history of Scotland’s witch trials with fictional accounts of the human stories behind the trials. Written with a lot of necessarily black humour, as the full…
Pittenweem Library reviews
This combines a well-researched history of Scotland’s witch trials with fictional accounts of the human stories behind the trials. Written with a lot of necessarily black humour, as the full…
This is Chris Brookmyre’s 25th novel and I happily admit to reading at least half of them, all with the greatest enjoyment. The Cracked Mirror does not disappoint with a…
This acclaimed French novel, published in English in 2023, is a tour de force. A work of auto fiction, it tells the story of Anne Berest’s family – a story…
You may wonder why I am recommending a book when I start off by saying I nearly gave up after the first couple of chapters. It’s by Dervla Murphy, the Irish…
Seldom has a book title been more apposite. Lee Miller (born Elizabeth near New York in 1907) really did have a number of lives, sometimes overlapping, sometimes running in parallel,…
The List of Suspicious Things is a story about growing up in the 1970s. With Margaret Thatcher as Prime Minister it is a difficult time for this working-class community in…
As Rachel Clarke says, this is the tale of a boy, a girl and the heart they share. It is also a story of love, of an immense generosity, of…
I had mixed feelings about this book. It started off as easy reading which is always a bonus for me! It read rather like a succession of diary entries but…
Rare is the book of 480 pages where I have read and savoured every single word and which has given such satisfaction and food for thought. I found best-selling novelist…
You may have noticed that the eider ducks are back in Pittenweem and soon we will see the females with their creches of ducklings. This book, The Place of Tides, tells…