Thursday, 11 September 2025

Kindle Audiobook: In the Deep by Loreth Anne White


In the Deep by Loreth Anne White is a gripping psychological thriller set along the wild Australian coast, where a woman’s seemingly perfect new life begins to unravel after her husband’s brutal murder. 

Secrets, lies, and betrayals emerge as investigators dig deeper, showing that what you think is happening is not what it really is.

The tension is superbly crafted, though I did not enjoy the narration style, as every last word was drawn out, which became distracting. Still, the story itself is so good, layered with twists that keep you questioning right until the end.

Rating: 4.5/5



 

Monday, 8 September 2025

Libby: The Let Them Theory, Mel Robbins

 


Thoroughly enjoyed this book. Instead of getting tense about what other people are doing, the Let Them Theory reminded me to simply let them, and focus instead on myself and what I can do. It is such a refreshing mindset shift.

I especially appreciated the chapter about friends and the trap of comparing yourself with others. It was both grounding and liberating.

Key takeaways:

You cannot control other people’s choices, only your response to them.

Comparison steals joy. Your focus should be on your own growth and priorities. Although comparing can motivate you to do better.

Letting go of control is not weakness, it creates peace of mind and frees up energy for what truly matters.

Relationships improve when you stop managing other people’s behaviour and start managing your own perspective.

A simple concept, yet surprisingly powerful.

5/5

Thursday, 4 September 2025

Libby Audiobook: Rise, Siya Kolisi

 


I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I am not a rugby fan, but I do enjoy starting my day with coffee and an inspirational leader.

Before reading, I knew very little about Siya and Rachel. The rugby match descriptions were not really my thing, yet there were moments where I found myself deeply moved, almost swept up in the elation and pride of those stadium victories.

What felt a little misaligned for me was that, early in the book, Siya emphasises his commitment to uplifting South Africa, yet later he moves to France. 

Still, any book that can elicit genuine emotion from me deserves top marks.

5/5