All I Want For Christmas (Bookish Edition)

It’s Day 13 in the #WonderlandBookChallenge and the prompt for the day is “Ornament – Favorite Bookish Merch.” I do a LOT of scrolling on Etsy, so I thought this would be a good time to put together my Bookish Wishlist. These are the stores and items I keep coming back to, eventually talking myself out of buying them for whatever reason. 

Ultimately this is one big hint for my husband. 😉 

If you have other stores or items you want to share, please list them in the comments! I’m always looking for new fun things to treat myself or friends/family to. 

Laptop Stickers

You cannot go wrong with a good laptop sticker, or just stickers in general. I spend too much time flipping through Instagram trying to find the perfect one, so here’s a fun mystery pack that eliminates my need to make any kind of decision. 

Coffee Mugs

There is no such thing as too many coffee mugs. My husband definitely disagrees, but he’s often wrong. The possibilities are unlimited when it comes to the perfect coffee mug, but I found two I really liked on Etsy. As a HUGE Gilmore Girls fan, the Stars Hollow mug immediately caught my eye. Then, of course, is the book dragon mug I saw, lost the link, then spent a millenia looking for the exact same one again. 

Coloring Books

Fun fact – one of my favorite things to do in my, very limited, free time is color! I have my own set of “not for toddler” color pencils and a few coloring books. It just feels so nice emptying your brain every once in a while, and that’s what coloring does for me. It also makes me feel artistic, which I am not. This year definitely needs some positive vibes, so the choice for coloring book felt natural. 

Candles

Candles. Candles. Candles. When you are ever in doubt, just buy me a candle. They are all over my house and used OFTEN. I am constantly using them until they won’t light anymore and heading out to get new ones. To stick with the bookish theme, here are some cute bookish candles from Briarwick. Couldn’t just pick one, so it’s the link to the whole store. 

Stores Mentioned Above:

  • EmilyCromwellDesigns – Seriously perfect Lisa Frank vibes with this one
  • MirkwoodScribes (pictured) – This one just feels so adventure-y and cozy, I love it
  • Briarwick – For all of your candle needs 
  • HopesPallette (pictured) – I spent HOURS looking through all of the adorable stickers in this shop
  • The PaintboxLetters (pictured) – More beautiful stickers and artwork for your bookish whims 
  • IncrediblePrintShop (pictured) – Can’t get enough stickers, so here’s another one full of perfect stickers and artwork 

What are your favorite Etsy/bookish stores and items? Share in the comments below or on Instagram!

Wonderland Book Challenge

This month I am participating in the #WonderlandBookChallenge on Instagram. Each day in December has a different wintery theme, and I’ll be posting all month.

I’ve really liked some of my pictures I’ve posted so far, so I thought it would be fun to post a gallery to the blog. I’ll update this throughout the month, but you can also see everything on the @DisappearHereBookBlog Instagram.

Enjoy!

Book Review – You Let Me In by Camilla Bruce

Genre: Fiction; Thriller; Paranormal

Rating: 4 / 5

Note: There are NO spoilers in this review. When discussing in the comments, please provide a spoiler warning if needed.

Before we get into this review – go ahead and add You Let Me In by Camilla Bruce to your TBR list. 

I thoroughly enjoyed this one. I read the entire novel in about two days. A quick and easy read, but honestly I didn’t want to put it down. 

My husband is likely tired of hearing me say this, (he listens to me talk out my reviews before I write them) but for me this was the novel-version of The Yellow Wallpaper, a short story by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, without the finality at the end. It’s been about four days since I turned the last page, and I still find myself going back to think about the ending. 

Cassandra Tipp, the main character of the novel, is assumed to be “crazy” and imagining things based on unknown trauma she faced as a young child. Camilla Bruce does an excellent job of dancing around fact and fiction. I’m still trying to decide what my final decision would be. It’s been an Inception kind of moment for me. I’ve been at war with myself over whether I believe the narrator. She tells such a compelling, but still unbelievable story. 

Yes, vague, I know – but I promised no spoilers. You’ll just have to read to find out. 

Alas, I don’t believe it matters. Even if someone is delusional, what they are experiencing is their reality and impacts them as such. As a child, you have a nightmare and wake up scared. It doesn’t matter if it never actually happened, it still changes you in that moment. 

I think regardless of where you land at the end of the novel, it’s a beautiful story about trauma and how people, especially children, react to that trauma. It doesn’t matter if you can visibly see someone else’s “shit,” it’s still very real to them. 

Another fun element of the novel was the narration style. When you make the poor (jk!) decision to major in English (just ask my mom) you enroll in a number of creative writing classes that specifically warn you against writing in the second person. I guess more of a caution than an all out rule. But in You Let Me In all of those professors were proven wrong. Not only does it work – I’m not sure this novel would have been the same without it. 

We all have at least one weird family member who is so interesting to talk to, even if you have no idea what they are talking about a majority of the time. The concept of a crazy, estranged aunt rambling and ranting at her niece and nephew is fun for me. 

The story will keep you guessing, thinking, and then second guessing yourself. You are taken back to your time as a young kid when you had imaginary friends, but the author brings it to an unexpected level of realism. 

I highly recommend this book. Like I said at the beginning, add it to your TBR now. You won’t regret it. 

Buy You Let Me In by Camilla Bruce here at Old Town Books, or at your local bookstore.  

Have you read You Let Me In? Let’s talk about it. Leave a comment or send me a message letting me know what you thought of the novel.

Book Review – Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi

Genre: Fiction

Rating: 5 / 5

Note: There are NO spoilers in this review. When discussing in the comments, please provide a spoiler warning if needed.

Don’t let the rating fool you, I disliked every moment I spent reading Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi. This novel forced me to encounter grief and heartbreak I have shoved deep, deep, down and would have preferred to leave it there. 

In this novel, Gifty, a young girl who’s family immigrated from Ghana to Alabama, USA, talks about her family dynamics, her brother’s heroin addiction, and the impacts of depression on her mother. I felt raw and exposed. The only way I can effectively portray how this novel made me feel is to share a personal story. 

Like Gifty, I have experienced the frustration, anger, and grief that comes when someone you love suffers from addiction and how you can spend months to years watching them destroy everything around them. No matter how prepared you think you are, no matter how much you convince yourself everything is going to be okay – addiction finds a way to take everything from you. It’s a disease that seeps in and leaves no one untouched. The parallels were uncanny. Gifty’s brother was found in the parking lot of a restaurant; my cousin in the bathroom of Walgreens. 

I was out at a bar with my friends the night I found out my cousin had died. At first I had no idea what my mom was talking about. 

“Brandon is dead,” she said.

I named other boys I knew named Brandon, never once thinking she was talking about my cousin. Once I ran out of Brandons, I took a moment and realized she was talking about the only Brandon I cared about. My favorite cousin. The Brandon we all thought had his addiction under control. 

I refused to come home and hung up the phone. I just started walking, refusing to acknowledge it. Refused to say it out loud. My boyfriend at the time, Keith, grabbed by arm and pulled me back into a hug and I lost it. There I was, standing among a huge group of people hopping between bars, sobbing. I took about 30 seconds to let it out, straightened up, wiped my face, and demanded that we go meet my best friend at the bar down the street.

I knew the moment we locked eyes that my mom had already called her. She walked over to me.

“Are we sad or are we drinking?” she said when she got closer to me. 

I understand, this is not a healthy way of dealing with grief. I understand I should have gone home. I understand that my coping mechanisms, to this day, are not highly recommended. Regardless, I looked at her and said, “drinking.” 

She ordered jagerbombs and that’s the last thing I remember until we were back at my friend’s apartment, me once again sobbing. 

I woke up the next morning, handled my hangover, and headed over to my aunt’s house. I was ready to be with my family, but I didn’t shed another tear until the day of his funeral. I took care of my family.

This book took me right back to where I was the night I found out he had died – sobbing on the sidewalk, unable to name my grief. It was uncomfortable, but until this moment – I didn’t realize how much emotion I still held deep within my heart. 

Yaa Gyasi has created something so real and raw, you become consumed and can’t look away. It’s breaking your heart, but you can’t stop reading. Her words are so honest. It only took me two days to read this one cover-to-cover. 

You need to read this novel. You need to experience the power behind Gifty’s story. I could not recommend Transcendent Kingdom more. 

Buy Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi here at Old Town Books (Alexandria, VA) or at your local bookstore!

Book Review – Still Missing by Chevy Stevens

Genre: Fiction; Mystery; Thriller

Rating: 2.5 / 5

Note: There are NO spoilers in this review. When discussing in the comments, please provide a spoiler warning if needed. 

Over the past two weeks I have found it very difficult to write this review. Not because I don’t have a lot to say, I have many things to say. I’m so good at being excited and passionate. I’m not very good at sharing negative feedback on the books I read. 

While browsing 2nd and Charles, I came across Chevy Stevens’s debut novel and knew immediately I wanted to read it. I really enjoyed her novels Those Girls and Never Let You Go. I have one requirement for thriller/mystery novels – I want a surprise ending or revelation. In the two novels I read previously, the “big reveal” was flawlessly executed but, unfortunately, this one fell short. (Or perhaps I was used to her twists enough that they were easier to spot.)

The style of the book really stood out and had me hooked right away. The narrator/main character, Annie O’Sullivan, recounts her abduction and what came after to her therapist. It’s a style I haven’t read before and I really enjoyed it at the start of the novel. Definitely a creative way to allow the narrator to tell us what happened to them. In this story, it allows for more honesty than might have been present if Annie were talking to someone else like a close friend or family member. 

For me, once we move past the story of Annie’s abduction, the one-way conversation with her therapist starts to feel a little off. I’m not entirely sure what it is, but I think at the point where she stops talking about what happened to her and starts discussing the daily events happening in her life it loses some of the genuine feeling. I want a real-time account of everything that was unfolding, not a calm and collecting re-telling more than a week later. 

Here is this woman, who was kidnapped and etcetera (I promised no spoilers) and she’s just calmly sitting there talking about it with her therapist. Her world is literally falling to pieces, even after she comes home, and the experience is too clean. It’s all too easy. 

From the moment she escapes (not a spoiler, she starts off talking to her therapist and immediately mentions that it’s all past tense) it just all feels too clean. 

And then, as with every other Chevy Stevens novel, the victim effortlessly loses herself in the arms of a man with a savior complex? Nope. Too easy. Too clean. 

All of that to say – I finished the book. I stayed up late reading and hoping for a BOOM kind of ending. Toward the end when I started to realize what was happening and how events were unfolding, my reading slowed. There was so much build-up, so much potential, but at the end I felt like the story took the easy way out. I wanted to be surprised, but turning the final pages I only felt disappointment. 

If you are going to read a novel by Chevy Stevens, I recommend Never Let You Go as a first. It has everything you want in a thriller. 

Buy Still Missing by Chevy Stevens at my local bookstore here, Scrawl Books (Reston, VA). 

Have you read Still Missing or other novels by Chevy Stevens? Let’s talk about it! Leave a comment or send me a message.

Book Review – The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson

Genre: Fiction, Horror

Rating: 4.5 / 5

Note: There are NO spoilers in this review. When discussing in the comments, please provide a spoiler warning if needed. 

The stars aligned with this book when Old Town Books (Alexandria, VA) hosted a readathon on the same weekend where my schedule was free and clear. It’s easily been over a decade since I devoured a novel in a single day, but Alexis Henderson’s The Year of the Witching pulled me in and refused to let me go. My main takeaway from the novel – I have GOT to stop reading good books when the sequel is not out yet. I NEED to see where Immanuelle’s story takes her.

The Year of the Witching mixes magic, intense religious constructs, grief and loss, and vive la résistance all in one wonderful and creative story. I enjoyed this book from cover to cover, and was consistently surprised along the way. 

Immanuelle, the main character, is raised in poverty without her mother and father, both physically and in memory. As she begins to learn more about herself, her parents, and the darkwood, she is shaped into the reluctant leader of the reckoning that is at the church’s front door. We see the power of literature, self discovery, and friendship as Immanuelle continues to learn and grow. 

Right away in this novel, you know Immanuelle is going to become the person standing against the church, but, regardless, her journey there is surprising and exciting. The most unexpected element being her love and kindheartedness toward a community that has always treated her as “other.” While standing against the religious leaders of Bethel (where this novel is taking place), she embodies the characteristics of selflessness, similar to that of Christ himself. She sacrifices herself for the greater good. This dynamic is interesting to watch unfold. 

The only thing missing from this novel was just MORE of the story. At about 450 pages, it went by so quickly. I wanted to know more about Immanuelle, her family, friends, and the community. I suppose that’s a good sign. I hope (I pray) that a second novel is coming. I will be anxiously waiting. 

I highly recommend you pick this book up the next time you visit your local bookstore. Buy The Year of the Witching here online from Old Town Books, where I purchased the book. 

Have you read The Year of the Witching? Let’s talk about it. Leave a comment or send me a message letting me know what you thought of the novel.

The Month in Review – October 2020

It’s hard to believe we’ve hit the one month mark for the Disappear Here Book Blog. It flew by in  a way things do when you are passionate about something. 

When I decided to start the blog, I had some reservations around being able to keep up with it. After the first month, those reservations have turned to excitement. With each novel, I’m anxious to finish, not just so I can spoil it for my husband with all of my ramblings, but because I can’t wait to share it with you. My whole life I’ve just been talking to whoever is closest, not sure if they were interested at all. Now I have the Disappear Here Book Blog, and, while the audience isn’t massive (yet ;)), I still have a place to discuss what I love most – books!

I hope you’ve enjoyed month one of the blog. As always, please send me your comments, feedback, recommendations, and book recommendations in the comments or on Instagram. I’m always looking to read outside of my normal queue/genre. 

Alright, now let’s get to it, the month in review — 

October Reads

Betty by Tiffany McDaniel

The Invention of Sound by Chuck Palahniuk

The Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness

The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson

Still Missing by Chevy Stevens

October Blog Posts

The Foundation

To kick things off on the Disappear Here Book Blog, I put together a list of my favorite novels, and what I love about each of them. From Less Than Zero to Harry Potter, I cover it all.

Book Review and Book Discussion – Betty by Tiffany McDaniel

My favorite book from the month is Betty by Tiffany McDaniel. I loved it so much that, in addition to the book review, I wrote a discussion post to dive further into the novel. If you take any recommendation from me this month, I hope it’s this one. This book will change your life for the better. 

My Favorite Pick-up Lines

Sometimes it’s all about the pick-up line, or in this case the first line of a novel. This post is a list of my favorite opening lines from novels, ones that really caught me at the beginning and didn’t let me go.

An Interview with Francis Chapman, Author of Book of Yeshua

For the first installment in the author question and answer series, I interview Francis Chapman about his new book Book of Yeshua. He provides a look into his new novel and some advance for aspiring writers. 

Book Review – The Invention of Sound by Chuck Palahniuk

Unfortunately, The Invention of Sound may be my least favorite on the book list for this month. It had so much potential but ultimate left me wanting more.

Let’s Talk About It – Betty by Tiffany McDaniel

SPOILER ALERT!

There are spoilers in the post below. If you haven’t read Betty, talk a look at my book review here, which is spoiler free. 

Book club has come and gone, and I still want to talk about Betty by Tiffany McDaniel. This book has so much to unpack and discuss. I’m not doing it justice with just a simple book review. If you haven’t read Betty, I cannot recommend it enough. This book will change your life. 

I could sit here and write for ages about all of the different elements of this novel, but for the sake of time (and attention span), I’m going to focus on three that stood out to me. Depending on your background and experiences, you may have walked away from the book with different thoughts on Betty’s story, and I would love to hear from you and talk about it. The layers of Betty are so many that, like following roots from a tree, no one comes out in the very same place or has the same path.. That’s what is so beautiful about it. 

The Journey from Girl to Woman

Each woman in this novel considers her transition to womanhood differently. For most of the women this revolves around losing their virginity and how the loss of childhood or innocence brings you fully into adulthood. The problem with this idea, as is seen many times throughout the novel, is that womanhood can be thrust upon you without your consideration or consent. 

Betty’s mother, Alka, is forced into womanhood when her father rapes her. I see this more as a forcible removal of her innocence, which in turn can transition to her shifting from girl to woman. Alka’s father removed her ability to see the world through the eyes of a child. 

Alka no longer has a flowery vision of the world, and she ensures that her daughters do not either. It’s hard to stomach the stories she tells and the way she talks to her daughters, but it’s almost as if she’s trying to prepare them for something she knows is coming – heartbreak. 

Much like her mother, Fraya doesn’t have a choice when her brother Leland rapes her, ultimately causing her to grow up faster than any of her other siblings. She is taking care of her younger siblings like she is their mother (often criticized by their mother for it) and even terminates a pregnancy with the bark of a tree at a young age.

Flossie, Betty’s other sister, makes casual mention of the boy who took her virginity, who told Flossie she owed him. But with Flossie it’s almost as if she expects this, like somehow being raped is how a girl properly loses her virginity. To me, this is one of the most heartbreaking aspects of the sexual violence throughout – most of the woman accept this as the standard and what should be expected and experienced. 

“My sister was just another girl doomed by politics and ancestral texts that say a girl’s destiny is to be wholesome, obedient, and quietly attractive, but invisible when need be. Nailed to the cross of her own gender, a girl finds herself between the mother and the prehistoric rib, where there’s little space to be anything other than a daughter who lives alongside sons but is not equal to them. These boys who can howl like tomcats in heat, pawing their way through a feast of flesh, never to be called a slut or a whore like my sister was.” (Betty, p. 279)

Betty, despite being the youngest and, one would naturally assume, the most impressionable, doesn’t accept the prevalent rape and sexual assault as her own fate. She’s telling this poetic story, and very clearly influenced by her family around her. We see her try to change the color of her hair and cake on make-up to try and make herself look like her siblings. But, when it comes abusive from men, she refuses to give in to the standard or what her mother and sisters would probably argue is inevitable. 

Betty stands strong and decides her own path, from standing up for herself when confronted by her principal to telling the young boy “no” when he tries to touch her breast. We see her journey to womanhood, not through one traumatic incident that yanks her away from childlike innocence, but throughout a personal voyage through individual lessons, stories, events, and ultimately coming to grips with the reality of her family. 

The most stark example of this transition, in my opinion, is when she finally confronts her brother, Leland, and tells him she knows he raped Fraya and he had no right to use her like that. She threatens him with a shotgun, reveals that his biological father is really the grandfather, and eventually scares him off so that he never returns. In this moment we see her finally use her voice to confront the demons in her family. 

Her bravery, strength, and refusal to lie and hide away the secrets of the past are powerful and inspiring. 

Taking It to the Grave

Secrets. They are sprinkled throughout the pages, but we begin to see a change in Betty as she decides not to take the stories of her family – the lies, the secrets, and even the happiness – to the grave with her. She sees the impacts secrets have on those around her and the damage that can be done. 

Most apparent are Alka and Fraya. Alka held the secret of the rape by her father, and the aid of her mother in these endeavors, close to her chest her entire life, but she decided to tell Betty. It brings perspective and protectiveness for Betty and how she interacts with and takes care of her mother. She sees this woman, who has endured the unimaginable, begin to unravel. 

Then, of course, there are the secrets Fraya kept close – Leland constantly raping her and the forced abortion that almost took her life. Fraya, despite a few moments where she understandably falls apart, is one of the most resilient characters I have ever had the pleasure of knowing. She did not let these pieces of her life become her whole existence. She moved away from home, got a job, wrote songs, and, in the end, was talking about leaving their small town in Ohio behind to start a new life. Although Betty never helped Fraya confront the truth about Leland when she was alive, Betty promises to tell her story in the end. 

“‘The only guilty one is you. And one day, when I write this story, you’ll open the book and find small slivers of mirror. Not everywhere, just over the names I’ve given the devil. When you collect the slivers and out them together, it’ll be your reflection that you see…’” (Betty, p. 441)

Loss and Heartbreak

The last topic I felt couldn’t be ignored is the constant presence of death, loss, and heartbreak throughout this novel. Aside from the rape and prejudice and racism throughout, there is so much death. Betty seems to be constantly saying goodbye to family members from her infant siblings she never met to her brother and sisters to a grandfather she hated. 

This is where Landon Carpenter, Betty’s father, really shines through. He dedicated his life to his family. He met a woman in a cemetery, thought he got her pregnant, and in that moment just decided it was his job and he would love them and care for them until the day he died. Other than Betty, he is the most spectacular person in this story. Watching the relationship between Betty and her father develop is so amazing to watch. He holds her up and I think, ultimately, he’s how she makes it through to the end – growing stronger along the way. 

“‘When I took a step forward, the hands took it with me. I realized then that the whole time I thought I’d been walking alone, my father had been with me. Supportin’ me. Steadyin’ me. Protectin’ me, best he could. I know I had to be strong enough to stand on my own two feet. I had to step out of my father’s hands and pull myself up out of the mud. I thought I would be scared to walk the rest of my life without him, but I know I’ll never really be without him because each step I take, I see his handprints in the footprints I leave behind.’” (Betty, p. 452)

Betty loses her brother Trustin, sister Fraya, sister Flossie, and her father Landon – all while trying to find her place in the world. Her whole world was crumbling around her and somehow she came out at the end stronger and more resilient. She is someone I hope to be like. I will spend the rest of my life trying to be more like Betty. 

Have you read Betty? Let me know what stood out to you about the novel. This is definitely one I will be talking about for years to come.

Book Review – The Invention of Sound by Chuck Palahniuk

Genre: Fiction; Horror

Rating: 3.5 / 5

I have complicated feelings about Chuck Palahniuk’s The Invention of Sound, so I’m going to do this review in two parts – the good and the frustrating. My younger self would be appalled that this review isn’t a glowing adoration of Palahniuk’s talent and skill. Until this week, I have never read a book of his I was not obsessed with. 

All that to say, it was still a Palahniuk book and, as such, had the benefit of cutting dark humor and a devastatingly wicked plot to put this book high above others. Ultimately it just left me wanting a little more. I need my thrillers to, well, thrill me. I want to be surprised and confused at the ending, blown away that the author somehow surprised me. It’s also worth noting, once I read the ending, I likely missed a lot of details from my quick read from the beginning of the novel (I couldn’t put it down). With a second read through, my opinion may change in a positive direction. And perhaps that is the magic. I was so sure I knew where we were going that I missed important clues along the way. 


As an overly optimistic person (most times), let’s start with the good. 

The Good

Palahniuk’s characters seduced me within the first few pages. The regular shift between character voice and point of view gives unique insight, much like Palahniuk’s novel Rant, which almost forces the reader to invest in different perspectives. They are each engaging with insane back stories. I found myself in a state of shocked rambling after reading each night. Shout-out to my ever-patient husband who lost sleep being my bouncing board. 

Another positive, at least for me, is just the right amount of violence description to elicit emotion without provoking gore induced nausea (or nightmares). Sometimes when I read novels and the author is too good at describing the scene, or at least too descriptive, I force myself to finish the book but experience a period of resistance when it comes to reading. It’s almost like the gore and horror are haunting me and I can’t shake the feeling. (Yes, I know American Psycho is one of my favorite novels. Contradiction, yay!) The allure of just enough violence description is the effect of the mind compensating for that missing piece. It really lends to the story and character development of one of the main characters, Mitzi, in ways I wasn’t expecting.

Palahniuk also gets credit for uniqueness. This is not your standard plot line or story. I’ve never read anything like it, and I don’t think I will again. Also, benefit for the busibodies like me, this novel can probably be read in one sitting (if you don’t have a toddler running around).

The Frustrating

And now to the frustrating pieces of the novel. 

All things come to an end and I get that. I just… I needed more! I was so excited in the beginning. Constantly talking about the book, rattling off my theories, anxious to see how it all ended. Then… it did. I remember closing the book and just sitting there for a moment, confused but mostly annoyed. Like Palahniuk almost got me there .. almost .. then just stopped. 

There is so much build up and tension throughout the novel. You see these two main characters, Foster and Mitzi, and you think you know how they are connected. You will likely be right, in a sense, but then they finally cross paths and it falls short. I can’t get into details, but when you read this one and get to the end, please reach out. I need closure and I desperately need to talk to someone about this. 

Maybe I’ve been spoiled with Gillian Flynn and other masters of thriller. I’ve even been spoiled by Palahniuk! His novel Rant is the most insane story I think I’ve ever read. I could never have predicted the ending. It was a wild ride from start to finish. I guess this review is a result of Palahniuk being too good at the start. I have a standard and expectation, based on his previous novels, and this one just didn’t live up. 

The Invention of Sound is still a novel worth reading, but if you haven’t read Palahniuk’s other books, start there. Rant and Choke are my top recommendations in that regard. 


On a separate note, a friend/yoga instructor or mine has gotten into my head, so I will no longer be including Amazon links for buying books. I will pick a local bookstore, likely one near me in Northern Virginia (or let me know if you have a recommendation). I hope this encourages you to buy local and support your local businesses. In the age of Amazon, I know they need all the help they can get.

Buy The Invention of Sound by Chuck Palahniuk here at Old Town Books in Alexandria, Virginia (or at your local bookstore!).

An Interview with Francis Chapman, Author of Book of Yeshua

I started the Disappear Here Book Blog to highlight books I’m reading, discuss my thoughts on various elements of literature, and lift up authors (both established and new). In an effort to move forward with the third goal, I am kicking off a Question & Answer series with authors, whether it’s their first book or they have published many novels.

-Francis Chapman-

Author of Book of Yeshua
Francis Chapman, Author

Francis Chapman lives in Surrey with his partner, three kids and a wide variety of badly behaved animals. He studied Philosophy at the University of Southampton, and has worked as an editor, copywriter, and a Historic Property Steward.

When he’s not parenting, reading (Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Thrillers… anything fictional really), or writing, he enjoys learning Japanese, watching American football (go Browns!), and he is also addicted to US reality TV show Survivor.   

Question & Answer

Ciera: How did you first develop the idea for the Book of Yeshua?  

Francis: It was actually a conversation I had with my partner about the absurdity of the Christian notion of Jesus being sent to die for our sins. It just wasn’t something that made any sense to me, this idea that by being responsible for deicide, we were somehow absolved of humanity’s collective sins. So I started thinking… okay… what would actually make sense? And the first thing I thought was, well, it would be really difficult, if not impossible to kill a living God. I started thinking about what Jesus’s motivations would actually be if he came to Earth of his own volition, and was not sent to his death by some abstract father figure. The basic plot of Book of Yeshua grew from there.  

Ciera: How long did it take you to write the Book of Yeshua? Did you hit any points where you thought you might not finish?

Francis: It took about two years for me to finish Book of Yeshua, but that did include a gap of several months after my son was born in April of 2019. I don’t remember there being a point where I was particularly pessimistic about finishing, but there were certainly days when you open up the laptop and think, “Oh God, I have absolutely no idea how to write.” But after a few awful sentences, I always managed to get back into the groove.

Ciera: Were there any defining moments that shifted or transformed the novel?

Francis: In a very early version of the novel, Pontius Pilate was going to take a very different, and somewhat heroic path. But as I was writing him, I realised that such a path simply wasn’t commensurate with his character, and the entire plot shifted as a result. I’m glad it did, though!

Ciera: Did you have hesitations when deciding to write a fictional novel based on religious texts due to potential backlash from religious groups or people?

Francis: Not as many hesitations as I would have in the past, even ten years ago. I think I’m in a fairly lucky position, I was raised as a Roman Catholic but was educated in a primarily secular environment, where I was free to consider my own moral, religious and philosophical positions without fear of reprisal or cultural annexation. Various authors I admire (Philip Pullman springs to mind) have led the way in terms of producing literature with an overtly anti-religious message, and have taken the hit, so to speak. Book of Yeshua wasn’t written to antagonise anybody, but I do acknowledge it may do so, but that didn’t stop me because it was a book I felt compelled to write.

Ciera: If readers take one thing away from your novel, what would you want it to be?

Francis: Mostly I just hope they feel entertained! But if they were going to take a message away, it would be that we, as human beings, overcomplicate morality, and that kindness is the essence of living a moral life.

Ciera: What books have been the most influential throughout your life?

Francis: As a child, Lord of the Rings changed the way I perceived fiction. I learned that an author could create more than just a story, they could create their own universe, their own languages and histories and races, and build a story on top of those foundations. As an adult, We Need To Talk About Kevin (WNTTAK) showed me there were books that never leave you. I found myself contemplating the questions that WNTTAK raised while walking to work, showering, and even watching TV. Ten years on it’s a book I still find myself thinking about during (rare) quiet moments.

Ciera: What advice do you have for aspiring writers? 

Francis: Even if you don’t enjoy a particular author’s work, if they are successful, ask yourself what it is that they do well. If you find yourself saying ‘J.K. Rowling/ Dan Brown/ Stephen King/ E.L. James is awful…’ you’re missing a trick. Any author who has achieved a level of success the rest of us aspire to must do certain things extremely well, even if they’re not to your taste. See if you can identify what it is they do well, and if there are techniques they employ that you can incorporate into your own work, whether its planning, writing, or even marketing.

Book of Yeshua

‘Did you ever ponder the sheer absurdity of the story told in the New Testament? That humanity’s redemption lay in the execution of God’s only son?’

Elliot Ambrose is one of the few souls on Earth who knows the truth about Yeshua of Nazareth. His determination to expose this truth throws him into conflict with an ancient and powerful foe, who will stop at nothing to protect their secrets.

Elliot must undertake a violent journey, and a war started in Judea two thousand years ago culminates in a final battle in the twenty-first century.

This dark thriller will appeal to fans of Dan Brown, S. J Parris, and Raymond Khoury.

Book of Yeshua is available to purchase on Amazon. It’s also available on Kindle Unlimited.