Since last Thursday I have managed to finish The Muse by Jessie Burton plus two other books.
I really enjoyed The Muse. Moving between two timelines it charts the journey of a painting, created in Spain and ending up in England.The earlier part of the book (set in 1936) focuses on Olive Schloss and her relationships with her family and Isaac Robles and his half-sister Teresa, who come to help out at the house she is staying in. Olive is a painter but her father, a renowned art dealer would never recognise her as such. But Olive manages to create several art works before the family are forced to return to England due to the Spanish Civil War. But the paintings are accredited to Isaac.
Jumping forward to 1967, Odelle Bastien starts work at the Skelton gallery in London and becomes involved in discovering the truth behind a painting that has been brought to them and finding out more about her boss, Marjorie Quick.
I enjoyed this book more than The Miniaturist by the same author but, although there was a lot mentioned about the fighting in Spain during the earlier periods in the book, I don't feel I really got to understand it very well, hence a 4 star rating not 5.
I moved on to Aunt Bessie Assumes by Diana Xarissa next. A nice easy read for A Sunday afternoon and into Monday. Definitely fits the description of cosy crime. 3 stars.
And finally I read this one:
This was another of what I would call a "cozy" read but this was a romantic one. It was quite long at 456 pages (it was originally a series of 4 books that have now been combined into 1) but it was a quick easy read.
"Beth is running away. With her young son Leo to protect, Willow Cottage is the lifeline she so desperately needs. Overlooking the village green in a beautiful Cotswolds idyll, Beth sees a warm, caring and safe place for little Leo.
When she finally uncovers the cottage from underneath the boughs of a weeping willow tree, Beth realises this is far more of a project than she bargained for and the locals are more than a little eccentric! A chance encounter with gruff Jack, who appears to be the only male in the village under thirty, leaves the two of them at odds but it’s not long before Beth realises that Jack has hidden talents that could help her repair more than just Willow Cottage.
Over the course of four seasons, Beth realises that broken hearts can be mended, and sometimes love can be right under your nose…"
3 stars from me.
I also managed to fit all 3 of these books to prompts for the 52 book club challenge and I'm now 1 book ahead of schedule and I've already started this one:
This is #5 in a series I'm gradually working my way through and again it works for another prompt. I do love a crime thriller.

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